eit im thas laa 


f 


oy 


CHINA, 1810. 


Indentations 
on the coin are private marks of 
merchants through whose hands 


The marks guarantee 
that the coin is not counterfeit. 


it passed. 


DENMARK, 1659. Com- 
memorating the defeat of the 
Swedish King, Charles XII. De- 
picts the King’s hand, reaching 
for the Danish crown, severed 
by a sword issuing from Heaven. 


ENGLAND, 1658. Machine- 
made coin issued by Oliver 
Cromwell, Lord Protector of the 
Commonwealth. Inscribed on 
the edge: “‘Let no man remove 
these letters under penalty of 
death.” 


1865. 


SCHAUFFHAUSEN, 
Shooting contest dollar. William 


Tell’s son holding the apple 
pierced by his father’s arrow. 


of the Van Verre Company 
under whose authority Henry 


Hudson founded New Amster- 
dam, now New York. 


-_BRUNSWICK-WOLFENBUTTEL, 1599. 
Depicting the duke’s an- 
noyance at the rebellion of ten noble 


Wasp Dellar. 


families. (wasps). 


1679. 
the Almighty. 


inscribed: Jesus. 
symbolizing the Holy Ghost. 


REUSS-SCHLEIZ, German principality. 


The only coin known depicting 


To the left is the sun 
To the right, a dove 
The AI- 


mighty in the centre. 


7 A tem, 


al 


BIOLLARS 


Devdeile 


my ORLD 


An exhibition of coins selected from the 
Louis G. Kaufman collection of silver 
pieces of dollar size, issued by 429 civil 
and religious authorities throughout the 
world during four centuries. 


First 
NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST Co. 
MARQUETTE, MICHIGAN 


i 


“Dollars of the World 


OR considerably more than 2,000 years, silver has been 
used as money. But until 1486 its coinage was limited 
to pieces of small denominations. In that year the 
first silver coins of dollar size were struck for the 
Province of Tyrol by Sigismund, Arch-Duke of 

PIDs Austria, and were called talers. Similar coins were 
successively adopted by the various countries in Europe, 
and subsequently by nearly all of the nations on the 

other continents. —The German states adhered to the original desig- 
nation of the coin. It became a daler in Denmark, Norway and 
Sweden, a daalded in the Netherlands, a tallero in Italy, and a 
dollar in the United States. Similar coins were known as crowns 
in England, five franc pieces in France, rubles in Russia and Pieces- 
of-eight (reals) in Spain. 

A SPECIMAN of that first dollar, now nearly four and a half 
centuries old, is included in the collection described in the following 
pages and exhibited in the offices of the First National Bank and 
Trust Company. Included also in this exhibition are 1600 dif- 
ferent coins of dollar-size, struck by 429 countries, states, prov- 
inces, principalities, cities, religious bodies and organizations of 
various kinds during the past 442 years. Originally the coins 
were made by hand. The silver was hammered into sheets of re- 
quisite thickness, the impressions of the dies, obverse and reverse, 
made upon it, and each coin separately cut out with hand shears. 


‘THE COLLECTION is thought to be reasonably representative of the 
entire silver coinage of this denomination from its inception up 
to the present time in all parts of the earth, and is believed to be 
the most comprehensive existing collection of “Dollars of the 
World.” 

IT Is, in addition, of unique historical importance since the 
relatively large dollar-size coins made them particularly adaptable 
to artistic die work and they are said to profile accurately the govern- 
ing heads of many of the nations and authorities that issued them. 
This type of currency, therefore, in addition to its extended use as 
a monetary unit, serves also to record and portray a distinguished 
company of the celebrated men and women whose names are asso- 
ciated with the great events of the past five centuries. 


ISO4 
1928 


WITH a charter running back 64 years, the First National Bank 
and Trust Company is one of the old institutions of America. 
WITH resources exceeding five million dollars, it has grown to a 
place among the best banks of the nation. 


WITH more than 5,000 accounts on its books, its facilities supply 
the needs of a multitude of clients, ranging from the thrift accounts 
of individuals to the corporate accounts of companies. 


BUT the largest accounts of the First National Bank and Trust 
Company once were smaller. Its oldest clients once were new. So 
the First National Bank and Trust Company, looking ahead to 
many tomorrows, values highly those customers whose accounts 
today may be new and small. 


BIG enough to fulfill the requirements of great corporations and 
wealthy individuals, but progressive enough to welcome those of 
modest means; eager for new affiliations but faithful to old attach- 
ments—that is the First National Bank and Trust Company 
policy and practice. 


OUR officers will count it a privilege to discuss your banking rela- 
tions with you. ; 


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‘SDVOLLARS OF THE WORLD”? 


“Qa KOO~e 


1. ABYSSINIA, 1887. African state. 
Menelik II. Claimed to have been a 
direct descendant of king Solomon and 
the queen of Sheba. 

2. ABYSSINIA, 1900. Inscription: The 
lion of the house of Judah has con- 
quered. 

8. AIX LA CHAPELLE, 1568. Capital 
and burial place of Charlemagne. The 
great king enthroned. 

4. ALBANIA, 1926. Independent king- 
dom since the world war. Amet Zogu. 

5. ALGIERS, 1823. Under Turkish do- 
minion. 

6. ALGIERS, 1824. Struck in base silver. 

7. ALSACE, 1608. Rudolph II. The 
Austro-Hungarian rulers were then land- 
graves of this province. 

8. ALSACE, 1620. Leopold. 

9. ALSACE, 1621. Ferdinand II. 

10. ALSACE, 1622. Leopold. 

11. ALSACE, 1632. Leopold. The 
provincé was annexed to France in 
1688, to Germany in 1871, and to 
France after the world war. 

12. AMSTERDAM, 1578. City in the 
Netherlands. War dollar struck from 
church silver when besieged by the 
Dutch patriots. 

138 AMSTERDAM, 1601. Dollar of the 
Van Verre Company. Under the au- 
thority of this company Henry Hudson 
founded New Amsterdam, now the City 
of New York. 

14. AMSTERDAM, 1673. War dollar 
struck during a French invasion of the 
Netherlands. 

15. ANGOLA, 1796. Portuguese African 
colony. 

16. ANHALT, 1806. German principal- 
ity. 

17. ANHALT, 1896. Frederick. 

18. ANHALT, 1914. Frederick II and 
Marie. Commemorating the 25th anni- 
versary of their marriage. 


19. ANHALT-COTHEN, 1747. German 
principality. 
20. ANHALT-DESSAU, 1846. German 


principality. Leopold Frederick. 
21. AN-HWEL, 1894. Chinese province 


22. ANNAM, 1820-41. Asiatic state. 
Now part of French Indo-China. 


23. ANNAM, 1841-47. 

24. ANNAM, 1847-83. 

25. ANNAM, 1847-83. 

26. APPENZELL, 1812. Swiss canton. 

27. APPENZELL, 1816. 

28. ARCOT, 1750. City in India. 

29. ARENBERG, 1785. German princi- 

pality. Louis Engelbert. 

30. ARGAU, 1812. Swiss canton. 

31. ARGENTINE, 1839. Struck by John 
Manuel, dictator of the Argentine Con- 
federation. 

832. ARGENTINE, 1879. Republic 
founded in 1853. Pattern. 

33. ARGENTINE, 1882. 

84. ARTOIS, 1555-98. Belgian prov- 
ince. Philip II, king of Spain, was 
count of Artois. 

35. ARTOIS, 1686. After its acquisition 
by France. This piece is larger than 
the standard French dollar of that 
period and was intended for trading in 
the Netherlands. Louis XIV. 

836. AUERSPERG, 1762. Austrian prin- 
cipality. Henry. 

37. AUERSPERG, 1805. William. 

38. AUGSBURG, 1694. German bishop- 
pric. Alexander Sigismond. 

89. AUGSBURG, 1744. Joseph. 

40. AUGSBURG, 1625. German city. 
The pine cone is symbolic of this city 
and appears on its coins. 

41. AUGSBURG, 1625. 

42, AUGSBURG, 1632. Struck by Gus- 
tavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, dur- 
ing the thirty years war. 

43. AUGSBURG, 1639. The reverse of 
these coins bear the portraits or titles 
and arms of the Austro-Hungarian 
rulers. Ferdinand III. 

44, AUGSBURG, 1641. View of the city. 

45. AUGSBURG, 1672. Leopold I. This 
is the reverse of the coin. 

46. AUGSBURG, 1694. 

47. AUGSBURG, 1694. 

48. AUGSBURG, 1743. Charles VII. 

49. AUGSBURG, 1765. 

50. AUSTRIA, 1479. On the marriage of 
Maximilian I to the daughter of the 
duke of Burgundy in that year. The 
coin, however, was not struck until 1508. 


41} 


‘““DOLLARS OF 


51. AUSTRIA, 1518. Maximilian I. The 
reverse bears the inscription: King of 
many European provinces and most 
powerful prince. 

52. AUSTRIA, 1530. Ferdinand I. Be- 
came king of Bohemia and Hungary on 
the death of Louis II, last national 
Hungarian king. 

58. AUSTRIA, 1559. Ferdinand I. 

54. AUSTRIA, 1590. In honor of Maxi- 
milian I, Charles V and Ferdinand I. 

' 55. AUSTRIA, 1619. Matthias. 

56. AUSTRIA, 1683. Commemorating 
the deliverance of Vienna from a siege 
by the Turks. Struck by Leopold I. 

57. AUSTRIA, 1705. Joseph I. Eugene 
of Savoy served under him. 


58. AUSTRIA, 1713. Charles VI. 
59. AUSTRIA, 1737. Charles VI. 
60. AUSTRIA, 1765. Joseph II. 


61. AUSTRIA, 1780. For circulation in 
the Orient. Dollars of this type, still 
bearing the portrait of Maria Theresa, 
were struck until recently. This queen 
allied Austria, France, Russia, Poland 
and Sweden against Frederick the Great 
causing the seven years war. 

62. AUSTRIA, 1781. Joseph II. 

63. AUSTRIA, 1790. Leopold Il. _ 

64. AUSTRIA, 1805. Francis II. Be- 
came Francis I of the Austrian Empire 
established in 1806. 

65. AUSTRIA, 1830. 

66. AUSTRIA, 1846. 

67. AUSTRIA, 1855. Francis Joseph I. 

68. AUSTRIA, 1857. Commemorating 
the completion of a railroad. 

69. AUSTRIA, 1867. Francis Joseph I. 

70. AUSTRIA, 1908. On the sixtieth an- 


niversary of the reign of Francis 
Joseph I. 


71. AUSTRIA, 1909. Francis Joseph I. 
Last emperor of Austria and king of 
- Hungary. 

72. BADEN, 1626. 

73. BADEN, 1765. 

74. BADEN, 1766. 

75. BADEN, 1817. 


Francis I. 
Ferdinand I. 


William. 
Charles Frederick. 
Arms of Baden. 


76. BADEN, 1835. Leopold. 
77. BADEN, 1841. Leopold. 
78. BADEN, 1875. Frederick. 
79. BADEN, 1902. Frederick. 


80. BADEN, 1906. Frederick and Louise. 
On the fiftieth anniversary of their 
matriage. 


81. BADEN, 1913. Frederick II. 


THE WORLD: 


. BAMBERG, 1623-33. German bish- 
opric. John George. . 

83. BAMBERG, 1657. Philip Valintin. 

84. BAMBERG, 1691. Commemorating 
the erection of a church. 

85. BAMBERG, 1693. Sede Vacant. 

86. BAMBERG, 1696. Lothar Francis. 

87. BAMBERG, 1750. John Philip. 

88. BAMBERG, 1795. .To meet contri- 
butions levied bY the invading French 
armies. | 

89. BAMBERG, 1800. View oF the city . 
of Bamberg. | 

90. BARCELONA, 1808. Shakin city. 
War dollar, struck during the French 
invasion. 

91. BARDI, 1622. 
Frederick Lando. 

92. BASLE, 1600. Swiss canton. View 
of the city of Basle. 

93. BASLE, 1622. . 

94. BASLE, 1694. Inscription: New 
money of the Republic of Basle. 

95. BASLE, 1756. 

96. BASLE, 1793. 

tL BASLE, 1879. Shooting contest dol- 
ar. 


98. BATAVIAN REPUBLIC, 1802. vi 
tablished after the invasion of the 
French revolutionary army in 1793. 
Now Holland. . 

99. BATENBURG, 1559. 
pality. William, 

100. BATTHYANI, 1764. 
principality. Charles. 

101. BATTHYANI, 1788. Louis. 

102. BAVARIA, 1625. Virgin and Child. 
Inscription: A shield to all who hope 
in Thee. 

103. BAVARIA, 1627. Arms of the 
duchy under Maximilian [. 

104. BAVARIA, 1694. Maximilian Eman- 
uel. 

105. BAVARIA, 1740. Chatles Albert ; as 
vicar of the Holy Roman Empire. 


Italian principality. 


Dutch princi- 


Hungarian 


106. BAVARIA, 1743. Charles VII. This 


prince, with the assistance of France, 
aspired to the throne of Austria, caus- 
ing the war of the Austrian succession 
in which he was defeated by Maria 
Theresa. 

107. BAVARIA, 1765. 

108. BAVARIA, 1768. 

ae BAVARIA, 1771. Maximilian Brake 
II. 


1 we BAVARIA, 1801. Maximilian J oseph 


42) 


Pm OOLLARS OF THE’ WORLD’ ’ 


1141. BAVARIA, 1803. Created a king- 
dom in 1806. Inscription: God and 
the fatherland. Maximilian Joseph IV. 


132. BAVARIA, 1818. Commemorating 
the first assembly of the estates. 


133. BAVARIA, 1828. Royal family of 
Bavaria. Inscription: Blessings of 
Heaven. 


114. BAVARIA, 1842. 

115. BAVARIA, 1855. Maximilian II. 

116. BAVARIA, 1874. Louis II. 

117. BAVARIA, 1888. Otto. 

118. BAVARIA, 1911. Leopold. 

119. BAVARIA, 1914. Louis III. 

120. BEARN, 1683. French province. 

Louis XIV. 

121. BEARN, 1693. Louis XIV. 

122. BEARN, 1770. Louis XV. 

128. BELGIOJOSO, 1769. Italian princi- 
pality. Antonius Barbiani. 


124. BELGIUM, 1847. Leopold I. First 
king of the Belgians. This country 
severed its connection with the Nether- 
lands in 1831. 

125. BELGIUM, 1849. 
gium. Inscription: 
strength. 

126. BELGIUM, 1853. On the marriage 
of the crown prince. Leopold I. 

127. BELGIUM, 1870. Leopold II. 

128. BELGIUM, 1880. On the fiftieth 


anniversary of its independence. Leo- 
pold I and Leopold II. 


129. BENTHEIM, 1657. German princi- 
pality. Moritz. 


130. BERG, 1806. German grand duchy. 
Joachim Murat brother-in-law of Na- 
poleon. 


181. BERNE, 1494. Swiss canton. One 
of the earliest coins dated in Arabic 
numerals. 


182. BERNE, 1679. Inscription: Money 
of the republic of Berne. 


133. BERNE, 1750. Gymnastic contest 
dollar. 


184. BERNE, 1750. Dollar for diligent 
application to study. 


135. BERNE, 1795. 
136. BERNE, 1826. Pattern dollar. 
137. BERNE, 1835. 


188. BERNE, 1857. Shooting contest 
dollar. 


139. BESANCON, 1641. City in Bur- 
gundy. Charles V. 


140. BESANCON, 1659. 


Arms of Bel- 
Union makes 


141. BOGOTA, 1808. City of the prov- 
ince now known as the United States of 
Columbia. Proclamation dollar. Ferdi- 
nand VII of Spain. 

142. BOHEMIA, 1530. Ferdinand I. 

148. BOHEMIA, 1556. Ferdinand I. 

144, BOHEMIA, 1569. Maximilian II. 
The first European sovereign to adopt 
religious toleration from principle and 
not policy, 

145. BOHEMIA, 1594. Rudolph II. 

146. BOHEMIA, 1606. Rudolph II. 

147. BOHEMIA, 1612. Matthias. 

148. BOHEMIA, 1621. Struck by Fred- 
erick V, known as the winter king. 
Head of the Protestants. His election 
caused the thirty years war. 

149. BOHEMIA, 1627. Struck by Ferdi- 
nand III on his coronation as king of 
Bohemia. 

150. BOHEMIA, 1695. Leopold I. 

151. BOHEMIA, 1709. 

152. BOHEMIA, 1721. Charles VI. 

153. BOHEMIA, 1741. Maria Theresa. 

154. BOHEMIA, 1790. 

155. BOLIVIA, 1827. First dollar of the 

republic. Simon Bolivar, South Amer- 
ican liberator after whom the country 
was named. 

156. BOLIVIA, 1844. 

157. BOLIVIA, 1852. Bolivar. 

158. BOLIVIA, 1865. 

159. BOLIVIA, 1870. Arms of the re- 
public. 

160. BOLOGNA, 1740. City in the papal 
states. 

161. BOLOGNA, 1782. Pius VI. 

162. BOLOGNA, 1796. Separated from 
the papal states by General Bonaparte. 

163. BOLOGNA, 1797. 

164. BOLOGNA, 1859. Provisional gov- 
ernment, preceding the foundation of 
the present kingdom of Italy. Victor 
Emanuel II. 

165. BOUILLON, 1613. Duchy near 
Luxemburg. 

166. BOUILLON, 1616. Henry De la 
Tour. 

167. BOUILLON, 1815. Philip d’Au- 
vergne. Pattern. 

168. BRABANT, 1579. Philip II, king 
of Spain was duke of Brabant, a prov- 
ince now part of Belgium. 

169. BRABANT, 1603. Albert and Eliza- 
abeth. 

170. BRABANT, 1618. Albert and Eliz- 
beth. 


Alea ie 


‘‘DOLLARS OF 


171. BRABANT, 1636. Philip IV. 
172. BRABANT, 1686. Charles II. 
173. BRABANT, 1686. 

174. BRABANT, 1703. Philip V. 
175. BRABANT, 1713. Maximilian 


Emanuel of Bavaria with the aid of 
Louis XIV governed this province for 
a short time. 

176. BRABANT, 1754. Maria Theresa. 

177. BRABANT, 1764. The Burgundian 
cross. 

178. BRABANT, 1784. Joseph II. 


179. BRABANT, 1790. Insurrection 
against Joseph II. Arms of the eleven 
revolting provinces. 

180. BRABANT, 1792. Leopold II. 

181. BRABANT, 1796. Francis II. 

182. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1620. 
German principality. Joachim Ernst. 

1838. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, Lows 
Frederick, Albert and Christian. 

184. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1695. 
George Frederick. 


185 BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1727. 
Christina. 


186. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1729. 
Charles William. 

187. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1754. 

188. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1769. 
On the union of Anspach and Culm- 
bach. Alexander and George. 


189. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1769. 
Alexander. 


190. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, | OS ge AF 

191. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1779. 
Commemorating the treaty of peace be- 
tween Frederick the Great and Maria 
Theresa. 


192. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1779. 
Peace dollar. 

193. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1779. 

(194. BRANDENBURG-ANSPACH, 1779. 

195. BRANDENBURG-BAIREUTH, 1664. 
German principality. Christian Ernest. 

196. BRANDENBURG-BAIREUTH, 1671. 
On the marriage of the margrave. In- 
scription: Now it follows after this 
that I will not travel alone. 


197. BRANDENBURG-BAIREUTH, 1704. 
Christian Ernest. 


198. BRANDENBURG-BAIREUTH, 1766. 
Frederick Christian. 


199. BRANDENBURG (Electorate) 1639. 
The late German emperors, the Hohen- 


zollerns, descended from this house. 
George William. 


THE WORLD’ 


200. BRANDENBURG, 1685. Frederick 
William. The Great Elector. One of 
the most renowned German rulers. 

201. BRANDENBURG, 1695. Frederick 
III became the first king of Prussia in 
1701. His monogram. 

202. BRANDENBURG-FRANCONIA, 1542. 
German principality. George and Al- 
bert. 


‘2038. BRANDENBURG-FRANCONIA, 1549. 


Albert. 


204. BRAZIL, 1811. 
rule, 

205. BRAZIL, 1820. 

206. BRAZIL, 1824. 
stitutional empire. 

207. BRAZIL, 1837. 

208. BRAZIL, 1863. 

209. BRAZIL, 1889. Peter II. Last Bra- 
zilian emperor. 

210. BRAZIL,. 1897. 
public. 

211. BRAZIL, 1900. Commemorating 
the fourth centennial of its discovery 
by Cabral. 

212. BREDERODE, 1556-68. German 
principality. Henry. 

218. BREMEN, 1562. 
bishopric. George. 

214. BREMEN, 1602. German City. — 

215. BREMEN, 1723. The key on the 
arms is symbolic of this city. 

216. BREMEN, 1906. 

217. BREMEN and VERDEN, 1674. 
Charles XI of Sweden was duke of this — 
principality which did not include the 
city of Bremen. 


218. BRESLAU, 1753. German bishopric. 
Philip Gotthard. 


219. BRESLAU, 1544. German city. 


220. BRESLAU, 1709. Struck by Charles 
XII, king of Sweden. 

221. BRETZENHEIM, 1790. 
principality. Charles August. | 

222. BRIXEN, 1710. Austrian bishopric. 
Caspar Ignatius. 

223. BRUNSWICK-GRUBENHAGEN, 1595. 
German principality. Philip II. 

224. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1 624. 
German principality. . 
225. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1624. 

Christian. 
226. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1645. 
Frederick. 
227. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1648-05. 


George William. Memorial dollar on 
his death. 


Under Portuguese 


Independent con- 


Dollar of the re- 


German arch- 


4 


German 


al a Me 


Pe DOLLARS OR 


228. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1667. 
John Frederick. 

229. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1667. 
Wild horse of Brunswick. 

230. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 16/79. 


231. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1695. 
Titles and arms of Ernest Augustus. 
232. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1698. 

Wild man dollar. 

233. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1708. 

234. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1713. 
George Ludwig, who became George I 
of England in 1714. 

235. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1714. 
Sophia. Commemorating the death of 
this princess. . 

236. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1729. 
Titles and arms of George II of En- 
gland. 

237. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1745. 

238. BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1756. 
Made of silver from the mines of Lute- 
dale, hence the figure of fortune play- 
ing the lute. 

2389 BRUNSWICK-LUNEBURG, 1801. 
George III of England. 

240. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1566. German principality. Henry. 

241. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1588. — 

242. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1595. Rebel dollar. Korah. Dathan 
and Abiram being swallowed up by the 
earth. 

243. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
P97) 1tuth dollar. Inscription: 
Truth conquers all calumnies, etc. 

244, BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1597. Lie dollar. Inscription: Lies 
can be dealt with easily, etc. 

245. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1599. Pelican dollar. Pelican feeding 
her young with the flesh of her breast. 
Inscription: For our alters and homes. 

246. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1599. Wasp dollar. Depicting the 
duke’s annoyance at the rebellion of ten 
noble families (wasps). 

247. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1622. Coined from silver taken from 
the cathederal of Halberstadt by the 
protestant bishop. 

248. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1626. Commemorating the death of 
the duchess. 

249. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1643. Augustus. 

250. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1643. Bell dollar. Inscription: Its 
sound is a message of peace. 


THE WORLD’’ 


251. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1650. Fortune dollar. Depicting hunt- 
ing, fishing, mining and science. In- 
scription: Men of the. world in this 
manner seek money. _— 

252. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1656. Augustus. 


253. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1660. Commemorating the duke’s 
travels. 

254. BRUNSWICK - WOL FENBUTTEL, 
1663. Arms of the duchy. 


255. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1664. Augustus. 


eer nen te: - WOLFENBUTTEL, 


pee NAGS - WOLFENBUTTEL, 

258. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1676. Augustus Frederick. Com- 
memorating his death. 

259. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1691. Rudolph and Anton. 

260. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1704. Rudolph Augustus. 

261. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1704. On the death of the duke’s 
wife. The deceased duchess ascending 
to Heaven from her palace. 

262. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1712. Anton Ulrich. 

ee Rung ~ WOLFENBUTTEL, 

264. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1725. Louis Rudolph 

265. BRUNSWICK - WOL PENBUTTEL, 
1728. Monogram of Augustus Wil- 
liam. 

266. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1729. Louis Rudolph. 

267. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 


1752. Swan dollar. From silver of 
the Brunswick mines. 


268. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1752. Mining dollar. 


pela oe - WOLFENBUTTEL, 


270. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL 
1856. William. 

271. BRUNSWICK - WOLFENBUTTEL, 
1915. Ernst and Victoria. Memorial 
dollar, 

272. BRUNSWICK, 1624. German city. 


273. BRUSSELS, 1579. War dollar, struck 
when the city was besieged by the Span- 
iards, 

274 BUENOS AYRES, 1808. South 
American province. Proclamation dollar. 


#{ 5 jp 


‘*DOLLARS OF THE WORLD 


275. BULGARIA, 1885. 
kingdom. 

276. BULGARIA, 1892. 

277. BURGAU, 1766. 
pality. 

278. BURGUNDY, 1515- 55. French prov- 
ince then governed by the celebrated 
Charles V, Holy Roman emperor, king 
of Spain and founder of one of 
Europe’s most extensive empires. The 
conquests of Mexico by Cortez and of 
Peru by Pizzaro, during his reign, fur- 
ther extended his dominions. The em- 
peror ceded the Spanish, Italian and 
Dutch thrones to his son Philip II and 
his German empire to his brother Ferdi- 
nand I. Retired to Spain and died in a 
monastery. 

279. CAMBODIA, 1860. 
dom. Norodom I. 
280. CAMBODIA, 1875. Pattern dollar. 

Norodom I. 

- 281. CAMBRAI, 1573. Arch-bishopric. 
Arms of Louis Berlaimont, the arch- 
bishop. 

282. CAMPECHE, 1790. Proclamation 
dollar of this Mexican city. 

283. CAMPEN, 1622. City in the Neth- 
erlands. Ferdinand II. 

284. CAMPEN, 1863. War @ollar, dur- 
ing a siege of the city. 

285. CARINTHIA, 1621. Austrian prov- 
ince. Ferdinand II. 

286. CARINTHIA, 1654. Ferdinand III. 

287. CARINTHIA, 1660. Leopold I. 

288. CARTHAGENA, 1873. Spanish city. 
Revolutionary dollar. 

289. CASALE, 1594. Italian city. Vin- 
cent I 

290. CATTERO, 1813. City in Dalma- 
tia. Struck by the French army when 
besieged by the allies. Initial and 
crown of Napoleon. The coin was 
cast in silver. 

291. CENTRAL AMERICA, 1842. The 
five mountains represent Guatemala, 
Honduras, San Salvador, Nicaragua and 
Costa Rica. 

292. CHAUX DE FONDS, 1863. Swiss 
city. Shooting contest dollar. 

293. CHIHUAHUA, 1915. War dollar, 
struck by General Villa when in control 
of this part of Mexico, 

294. CHILE, 1811. Ferdinand VII, king 
of Spain. Before the establishment of 
the republic. 

295. CHILE, 1817. 
republic. 

286. CHILE, 1839. 
breaking its chains. 


Arms of the 


Ferdinand I. 
Austrian princi- 


Asiatic king- 


First dollar of the 
The Chilean eagle 


lic, 

298. CHILE, 1873. 

a CHINA, 1800. Revolutionary ont: 
ar: 

800. CHINA, 1810. The indentations on 
the coin are private marks of merchants 
through whose hands it passed. These 
marks guarantee that the coin is not 
counterfeit. . 

201. CHINA, 1856. Struck by Chinese 
merchants. Inscription: One ounce 
cake of pure silver. 

302. CHINA, 1912. 
empire. 

303. CHINA, 1912. Sun-Yat-Sen. First 
president of the republic. 

304. CHINA, 1912. Li Yuan-hung. 
Leader of the revolutionary forces. 

305. CHINA, 1913. Li-Yuan-hung. 

306. CHINA, 1914. Pattern. 

807. CHINA, 1916. Yuan Shih-kai, sec- 
ond president of the republic. . 

308. CHINA, 1916. Yuan Shih-kai. 

Sie CHINA, 1922. Revolutionary dol- 
ar. 


310. CHINESE TURKESTAN, 1910. Chi- 
nese province. 
811. CHUQUISACA, 1789. Now Sucre 
(Bolovia). Proclaiming its fidelity to 
Charles IV, king of Spain. 
$12. CHUQUISACA, 1825. Commemo- 
rating the gratitude of the city to Boli- 
var. 
313. CIS-ALPINE, 1800. Italian ecb. 
lic founded by General Bonaparte. 
Commemorating the battle of Marengo. 
314. COIRE, 1633. Swiss city. — 
815. COLOGNE, 1570. German arch- 
bishopric. Saint Peter with the keys of 
Heaven. 
316. COLOGNE, 1688. 
before the Infant Jesus. 
$17. COLOGNE, 1777. Maximilian Fred- 
erick, 
318. COLOGNE, 1516. German city. ih 
honor of Saint Ursula. 
819. COLOGNE, 1569. Arms of the city. 
$20. COLOGNE, 1700. | 
$21. COLOGNE, 1705. View of the city. 
322. COLORADO, 1900. This piece, 
known as a Lesher dollar, was struck 
by private interests without govern- 


297. CHILE, 1854. Arms of the repub- 


Last’ dollaeioe the@ 


The three kings 


mental authority during Bryan’s second —S 
campaign for the presidency when free 


coinage of silver was a national issue. 
It was intended solely for the purchase 
of commodities, . 


“{ 6 


7 ee ee ae — 
- - ~ 
« 


‘- 


4 
a. 
a 


fe OOLLARS OF 


$23. COLUMBIA, 1834. South Amer- 
ican state. 

324. COLUMBIA, 1865. Arms of the 
United States of Columbia. 

$325. COLUMBIA, 1871. 

8326. COMORO, 1883. 
colony. Pattern. 

$27. COMORO, 1890. Depicting the vari- 
ous implements of war. 

$28. CONGO, 1887. Belgian African 
colony. Leopold II. 

829. CONGO, 1896. Leopold II. Pattern. 

$30. CONSTANCE, 1761. German bish- 
opric. Francis Conrad. 

$31. CONSTANCE, 1625. German city. 

832. COPIAPO, 1865. City in Chili. 
War dollar. Struck during war with 

- Spain. 

$33. CORDOVA, 1852. South American 
province, now part of the Argentine 
Republic. 

$334. COREA, 1900. 
Japanese protectorate. 

$35. CORVEY, 1683. Saint Vitus, who 
was the patron saint of this abbey. 

$36. CORVEY, 1709. 

$37. CORVEY, 1758. 

$38. COURLAND, 1645. State on the 
Baltic sea, subsequently annexed to the 
Russian empire under Catherine Il. 
Jacobi. 

$39. COURLAND, 1780. Peter. Last of 
the dukes of Courland. 

$40. CRONSTADT, 1660. City in Tran- 
sylvania. When besieged by George 
Rakoczi II. 

$41. CUBA, 1898. First dollar of the 
republic. 

342. CUBA, 1916. 

843. CUENCAMI, 1914. City in the 
Mexican state of Durango. War dollar. 
Struck by Generals Contreras and Ceni- 
ceros. Inscription: Death to Huerta. 

$44. CUNDINAMARCA, 1821. South 
American state, now part of Columbia. 

$45. CUZCO, 1825. City in Peru. 
Memorial dollar to its emancipator 
Bolivar. Ruins of the palace of the 
Incas. 

$46. CUZCO, 1834. On the adoption of 
the Peruvian constitution. 

$47. CUZCO, 1837. For the republic of 
South Peru. 

$48. DANTZIC, 1577. When the city 
was besieged by the armies of Poland. 
Inscription: Christ, Saviour, defend us. 


French African 


Asiatic province. 


«B49. DANTZIG, 1649. John Casimir. 


King of Poland. 


Tey I WwiORi LAL). «. 


350. DANTZIC, 1685. John III, king of 
Poland, whose assistance to Leopold I 
saved Vienna from capture by the 
Turks. 

351. DEMERARY, 1800. British colony 
of Demerary and Essequebo, British 
Guiana. George III. 

352. DEMERARY, 1816. 

353. DEMERARY, 1832. William IV. 

354. DENMARK, 1572. Frederick II. 

355. DENMARK, 1620. Christian IV. 
Elected chief of the protestant league 
against Ferdinand II of Austria. 

356. DENMARK, 1620. 

357. DENMARK, 1628. Christian IV. 

358. DENMARK, 1649. Frederick III. 
The Danish crown became hereditary 
under this king. 

359. DENMARK, 1652. 

360. DENMARK, 1569. Commemorat- 
ing the defeat of the Swedish king, 
Charles XII. Depicts the king’s hand, 
reaching for the Danish crown, severed 
by a sword issuing from Heaven. 

361. DENMARK, 1600. Frederick III. 

362. DENMARK, 1666. 

363. DENMARK, 1675. Christian V. 

364. DENMARK, 1690. Christian V. 

365. DENMARK, 1704. Frederick IV. 
Commemorating the fifth year of his 
reign. 

366. DENMARK, 1711. Frederick IV. 

367. DENMARK, 1731. Christian VI. 

368. DENMARK, 1747. Frederick V. 
Coronation dollar. 

369. DENMARK, 1764. Frederick V. 

370. DENMARK, 1776. Crown and 
monogram of Christian VII. 

371. DENMARK, 1799. Christian VII. 

372. DENMARK, 1835. Frederick VI. 

373. DENMARK, 1840. Christian VIII. 

374. DENMARK, 1848. Frederick VII. 
On the death of his predecessor. 

375. DENMARK, 1849. Arms of the 
kingdom. 

376. DENMARK, 1863. Christian IX. On 
the death of Frederick VII. 

377. DENMARK, 1868. 

378. DEVENTER, CAMPEN and ZWOLLE, 
1555. The three imperial cities in the 
Netherlands. Charles V. 

379. DEVENTER, CAMPEN and ZWOLLE, 
1568. Arms of the three cities. 

380. DEVENTER, 1609. Commemorat- 
ing the treaty of peace between Spain 
and the Dutch provinces. 

381. DIETRICHSTEIN, 1646. Austrian 
principality. Sigismund. 


a 


TOOT Laks Oe 


382. DIETRICHSTEIN, 1695. Ferdinand. 

383 DIETRICHSTEIN, 1728. Charles 
Louis. 

$84. DOMBES, 1652. 
ity. Gaston. 
885. DOMINICA, 1891. 
the Dominican republic. 
886. EAST FRISIA, 1540-99. 
of the Netherlands. 

$87. EAST FRISIA, 1564. 

388. ECUADOR, 1846. 

889. ECUADOR, 1858. Arms of the re- 
public. 

390. ECUADOR, 1897. The president of 
the republic. 

391. EGGENBERG, 1630. German prin- 
cipality. John Ulrich. 

392. EGGENBERG, 1658. 
tian and John Siefried. 

393. EGYPT, 1861. Under Aziz. 

894. EGYPT, 1905. Under Hamid II. 

395. EGYPT, 1916. Under Hussein. 

396. EGYPT, 1923. Fuad. 

397. EICHSTADT, 1694. 
opric. 

$898. EICHSTADT, 1757. 

899. EICHSTADT, 1781. 
View of the city. 

400. EICHSTADT, 1783. John Anton III. 

401. EICHSTADT, 1796. Joseph. 


402. EISLEBEN, 1661. German city. 
Commemorating the reformation of 
Martin Luther. 


403. ELWANGEN, 1765. 
opric. Anton Ignatius. 


404. EMBDEN, 1600. City in the Neth- 
erlands. 


405. ENGLAND, 1552. 
England. Edward VI. 


406. ENGLAND, 1601. Elizabeth, the 
virgin queen. Virginia, the first English 
settlement in America was so named in 
her honor. The figure 1, above the 
crown is an abbreviation of the date of 
the coin. These pieces were hammered. 


407. ENGLAND, 1622. The reverse of 
this coin bears the inscription: What 
God has joined let no man sever: re- 
ferring to the union of England and 
Scotland. James I, in whose reign first 
appeared the political parties known as 
the Tories who stood for the king and 
the Whigs who represented the people. 


408. ENGLAND, 1625-48. Arms, crown 
and monogram of Charles I. Inscrip- 
tion: Under Christ I reign. 


French principal- 
First dollar of 


Province 


John Chris- 


German bish- 


Sede Vacant. 
Sede Vacant. 


German bish- 


First dollar of 


THE WORDD: 


409. ENGLAND, 1645, Charles I. The 
sun above the king’s head is the mint 
mark denoting the date of the coin. 
This king’s controversy with parlia- 
ment led to his execution. 


410. ENGLAND, 1652. Dollar of the 
Commonwealth of England, after the 
execution of Charles I. 


411. ENGLAND, 1658. Oliver Crom- 
well, lord protector of the common- — 
wealth and the most illustrious char- — 
acter in English history. This coin is 


machine made and is inscribed on the 


edge: Let no one remove these letters 
under penalty of death. Inscription on — 
reverse: Peace is secured by war. 


412. ENGLAND, 1672. Charles II. As- 
cended the throne after Cromwell's 
death, at the instance of General Monk. 
The island of Manhattan was ceded to 
England by the Dutch in this reign. 

413. ENGLAND, 1688. James II. Ex- 
iled, died and buried in France. The 
last of the Stuarts. 

414. ENGLAND, 1692. William and 
Mary. Called to the throne by a Brit- 
ish national convention. 


415. ENGLAND, 1700. William III. After 
the death of the queen. 


416. ENGLAND, 1713. Anne. Mart: 
borough served under her. Gibraltar 
acquired in this reign. 

417. ENGLAND, 1723. George I. First 
English king of the house of Bruns- 
wick. This prince could not speak 
English. . 

418. ENGLAND, 1739. George II. Can- 
ada was taken from France during his 
reign and the British colony of India 
was greatly extended. 

419. ENGLAND, 1743. Arms of En- 
gland, France, Ireland and Brunswick. 
The English rulers of this period con- 
tinued to entitle themselves kings Or’ 
France. 

420. ENGLAND, 1804. Bank of Posie 
dollar. George III. The American 
revolution, the wars with Napoleon and 
the war of 1812 occurred during his 
reign. 

421. ENGLAND, 1804. Reverse of bank 
of England five shilling dollar. 

422. ENGLAND, 1816. George III. Pat- — 
tern dollar. | 


423. ENGLAND, 1817. George III. Pat- 


tern dollar, representing England, SCOtHs on 


land and Ireland. 


424. ENGLAND, 1818. 
the dragon. 


425. ENGLAND, 1821. 


St. George and | 
George IV. 


“{ 8 }» 


‘*DOLLARS OF THE WORLD’’ 


426. ENGLAND, 1826. Arms of Great 
Britain. 

427. ENGLAND, 1831. 
Pattern dollar. 

428, ENGLAND, 1839. Victoria. Pat- 
tern dollar at the beginning of her 
reign. 

429. ENGLAND, 1847. Victoria. Pat- 
tern dollar. Known as the Gothic 
crown. ‘This is said to be the most 
attistic coin ever struck. 

430. ENGLAND, 1887. Victoria. Jubilee 
dollar. On the fiftieth anniversary of 
her reign. 


William IV. 


' 481. ENGLAND, 1887. Reverse of four 


shilling jubilee dollar of Victoria. 


482. ENGLAND, 1893. Victoria. At 
the close of her reign. 


433.. ENGLAND, 1902. Edward VII. 
Pattern dollar, copied after the old type 
of Charles I. 


434. ENGLAND, 1902. Edward VII. 

435. ERBACH, 1624. German princi- 
pality. 

436. ERFURT, 1617. German city. 

437. ERFURT, 1631. Struck by Gusta- 


vus Adolphus, king of Sweden, after 
the battle of Leipsic. 


438. ERITREA, 1891. Italian African 
colony. Humbert I, king of Italy. 
439. ESTERHAZY, 1770. Austrian prin- 
cipality. Nicolaus. 

440 ETRURIA, 1806. Italian state. 
Charles Louis and his mother, the 
regent, 


441. ETRURIA, 1807. 
and the regent. 

442. FERRARA, 1619. Italian city under 
papal authority. Paul V. 

443. FLANUERS, 1665. Belgian province. 
Philip 1V, king of Spain, was count of 
Flanders. 

444, FLORENCE, 1861. Italian city. Dol- 
lar of the provisional government prior 
to the foundation of the present king- 
dom of Italy. Victor Emanuel II. 


Charles Louis 


445. FORMOSA, 1840. Island in China 


sea. Inscription: Silver cake of stand- 
ard purity, struck in the reign of Tao 
Kuang. 
446 FRANCE, 1643. First French dol- 
lar. Louis XIII whose prime minister 
was the illustrious Cardinal Richelieu. 
447, FRANCE, 1653. Louis XIV. Most 
celebrated of the French Bourbon kings. 
Engaged in six wars during his reign of 
seventy-two years. Established France 


as the leading European power. Tu- 
renne, Villars, Vendome, Conde and 
Vauban served under him. Golden age 
of French literature. Louisiana named 
in his honor. 


4458. FRANCE 1665." Vouls XIV: 


449. FRANCE, 1679. Struck by the 
French parliament. Louis XIV. 


450. FRANCE, 1708. Louis XIV. 


451. FRANCE, 1715. Louis XIV. At 
the end of his reign. 


452. FRANCE, 1716. Louis XV. These 
pieces were struck over dollars of Louis 
XIV which is apparent on many of the 
coins, 

453. FRANCE, 1723. Reverse of dollar 
of Louis XV. In 1717 the king ceded 
to the Compagnie de Mississippi all of 
the Louisiana territory for colonization 
purposes and extended to it the national 
credit. Its collapse doubled the French 
national debt. 


454. FRANCE, 1724. Louis XV. 
455. FRANCE, 1726. Louis XV. 
456. FRANCE, 1769. Louis XV. 


457. FRANCE, 1774. Louis XV. Last 
year of his reign. 


458. FRANCE, 1786. Louis XVI. Ally 
of the American revolutionists. Pattern 
dollar. 


459. PRANCE, 1787. Reverse of the 
French dollar preceding the revolution. 


460. FRANCE, 1791. Louis XVI. Pat- 
tern dollar. 


461. FRANCE, 1792. Louis XVI. Struck 
during the king’s imprisonment prior 
to his execution. First dollar of the 
revolutionary government. 


462. FRANCE, 1793. Under the conven- 
tion, during the ascendency of Robes- 
pierre. Inscription: Reign of the law. 


463. FRANCE, 1799. Dollar of the Di- 
rectory. Inscription: Union and 
strength. 


464 FRANCE, 1804. Consulate estab- 
lished by Napoleon Bonaparte upon his 
return from Egypt and overthrow of 
the Directory. Ceded Louisiana to the 
United States. 


465. FRANCE, 1805. Napoleon I. First 
dollar of the empire. The reverse of 
these coins, for a period of three years, 
continued to bear the _ inscription: 
French Republic. The calendar, adopted 
during the revolution, fixing the year 
1792 as year One was abandoned in 
1806 and the coins were again dated 
in Arabic numerals. 


“{ 9 


‘““DOLLARS’ OF THE  WoRwmD 


466. FRANCE, 1808. Napoleon I. The 
empire attained its greatest extent in 
1810 and included or dominated France, 
Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Portugal, Bel- 
gium, Holland, Baden, Bavaria, Wur- 
temburg, Westphalia and Dalmatia. It 
was allied to Austria, Russia, Denmark, 
Norway and Saxony, and a marshal of 
the empire became crown prince of 
Sweden. 

467. FRANCE, 1814. Louis XVIII. Dur- 
ing Napoleon’s exile at Elba. 

468. FRANCE, 1815. Reverse of dollar 
struck by Napoleon 1 during his reign 
of one hundred days following his re- 
turn from Elba. Last coinage of the 
emperor whom Lord Roseberry desig- 
nated as the greatest, by far, of all great 
men. ? 

469. FRANCE, 1816. Napoleon II. Pat- 
tern dollar. ‘This prince did not reign. 

470. FRANCE, 1821. Reverse of dollar 
of Louis XVIII, who again ascended 
the throne after the fall of the empire. 

471. FRANCE, 1825. Charles X. Exiled 
for attempting to dissolve the legisla- 
tive assembly and restrict the freedom 
of the press. 

472. FRANCE, 1830. Louis Philippe I. 
The citizen king. 

473. FRANCE, 1831. Reverse of French 
dollar of this period. 

474. FRANCE, 1831. Commemorating 
the king’s visit to the mint. 

475. PRANCE, 1832. Henry V. Pattern 
dollar. This prince did not ascend the 
throne. 

476. FRANCE, 1844. 

477. FRANCE, 1848. 
the second republic. 

478. FRANCE, 1848. Pattern dollar of 
the second republic. 

479. FRANCE, 1848. Pattern dollar of 
the second republic. 

480. FRANCE, 1848. Pattern dollar of 
the second republic. 

481. FRANCE, 1850. Adopted dollar of 
the second republic. 

482. FRANCE, 1852. Louis Napoleon. 
Bonaparte, president of the republic. 
483. FRANCE, 1853. Napoleon III. First 
coinage of the second empire. Inscrip- 
tion: Napoleon III by the grace of God 

and the will of the nation. 

484, FRANCE, 1854. Reverse of dollar 
of the second empire. 

485. FRANCE, 1870. Napoleon III. 

486. FRANCE, 1870. Pattern dollar. In 
anticipation of the successful conclu- 
sion of the Franco-Prussian war. In- 
scription: Germania finished 1870. 


Louis Philippe I. 
Pattern dollar of 


“4 10 


487. FRANCE, 1870. Napoleon III. Last 
coinage of the second empire, aes 

488. FRANCE, 1871. First dollar of the 
third republic. 

489. FRANCE, 1871. Henry V. Pattern 
dollar. In anticipation of his accession 
to the French crown. | 

490. FRANCE, 1872. Thiers first presi- 
dent of the third republic. Satirical 
pattern dollar. 

491. FRANCE, 1873. Reverse of pattern 
dollar, dedicated to the international 
monetary commission by Henry V, pre- 
tender to the French throne. 

492. FRANCE, 1874, Napoleon IV. Pat- 
tern dollar of the prince imperial who > 
never reigned. 

493. FRANCE, 1874. Marshall McMahon, 
second president of the republic. Satir- 
ical pattern dollar. - 

494. FRANCE, 1876. Dollar of the pres- 
ent republic. Hercules, Liberty and 
Equality. | . 

495. FRANKFORT, 1622. German city. 

496. FRANKFORT, 1763. 


497. FRANKFORT, 1772. Convention 
dollar. View of the city. 
498. FRANKFORT, 1776. Convention 


dollar. 
499. FRANKFORT, 1793. ar, 
500. FRANKFORT, 1796. During the 
French occupation of the city. | 
501. FRANKFORT, 1841. 3 
502. FRANKFORT, 1866. Portrait, said 
to be, of the actress Janauschek. 
503. FRIBOURG, 1813. Swiss canton. 
504. FRIBOURG, 1881. Shooting contest 
dollar. Figures represent the cantons 


of Fribourg and Solothurn joining the — 
Swiss federation in 1481. 


505. FRIEDBERG, 1804. German prin- 
cipality. 
506. FRISING, 1709. German bishopric. 
John Francis. | 
507. FRISING, 1790. Joseph Conrad. 
508. FUGGER, 1694. A wealthy family 
of Augsburg bankers authorized to issue 
money. ay 
509. FUGGER, 1781. Arms of the House. 
510. FULDA, 1788. German bishopric. 
Sede Vacant. . 
511. FULDA, 1796. Coined from church i 
silver, to meet contributions levied by 
the French army. Adelbert, the bishop. 
512. FUNG TIEN, 1900. Chinese prov- 
ince. 
513. FURSTENBERG, 1762. German 
principality. Joseph William Ernest. 


ae 
’ 


ue Ls ae Tee Ola, 


DP DOLLARS OF ‘THE WORLD” 


514, FURSTENBERG, 1767. Joseph Wen- 
cel, 

515. FURSTENBERG, 1790. Mining dol- 
lar. 

516. GELDERLAND, 1561. Philip II, 
king of Spain, duke of this Dutch 
province. 

517. GELDERLAND, 1718. Frederick 
William I, king of Prussia, who ac- 
quired the province by the treaty of 
Utrecht. 

518. GENEVA, 1723. Swiss republic. 

519. GENEVA, 1794. The reverse of this 
coin is inscribed: Prize of labor. 

520. GENEVA, 1796. 

521. GENEVA, 1848. 

522. GENOA, 1625. Italian state given 
the right to issue money by Conrad II, 
whose name appears on its coins for 
several hundred years. 

5283. GENOA, 1796. Dollar of the re- 
public and dukedom. 

524. GERMAN EAST AFRICA, 1893. 
German African colony. William II. 
525. GERMAN NEW GUINEA, 1894. 

German colony. Dollar of the New 
Guinea Company. These coins were re- 
called by the German imperial govern- 

ment, 


537. GRONINGEN, 1672. City in the 
Netherlands. Memorial dollar. Struck 
by the university of the city. 

588. GRONINGEN, 1672. While the city 
was besieged by the bishops of Cologne 
and Munster. 

539, GRONINGEN, 1682. For the prov- 
inces of Groningen and Ommelanden. 
540. GRONINGEN and OMMELANDEN, 
1685. Inscription: For religion and 

liberty. 

541. GUADALAXARA, 1822. Mexican 
city. Struck by the cathedral. Pro- 
claiming Augustin first constitutional 
emperor of Mexico. 


542. GUADELUPE DE TECPAN, 1813. 
Mexican city. War dollar. Struck by 
General Morelos during the rebellion 
against Spain. This piece is cast in 


silver. 
543. GUASTALLA, 1619. Italian princi- 
pality. Ferdinand. 


544. GUATEMALA, 1810. This coin 
bears the portrait of Charles IV and 
the title of his successor Ferdinand VII, 
king of Spain. 

545. GUATEMALA, 1871. In honor of 
President Carrera. 


546. GUATEMALA, 1879. 


547. GUATEMALA, 1895. 

548. GURK, 1801. Austrian bishopric. 
Francis. 

549. HAITI, 1820. Henry I. Negro king 
of the island. 


550. HAITI, 1895. 
public. 


526. GERMANY, 1925. Dollar of the 
German republic. Although the Ger- 
mans issued a far greater number of sil- 
ver dollar size coins than any other peo- 
ple, this is the only dollar ever struck 
for Germany as a nation. 

527. GERONA, 1808. Spanish City. Dur- 
ing siege by the French armies. 551. HALBERSTADT, 1691. German 

528. GERTRUDENBERG, 1593. City in bishopric. Saint Stephen, the first mar- 
the Netherlands. Memorial dollar. tyr. 

529. GLARUS, 1847. Swiss canton. 552. HALLE, 1545. German city. Arms 
Shooting contest dollar. of the municipality. 


580. GLUCKSTADT, 1624. City in 553. HALLE, 1746. 


Dollar of the re- 


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Schleswig Holstein, founded by Chris- 554. HAMBURG, 1629. German city. 
tian IV, king of Denmark 

531. GOSLAR, 1705. German city. 

532. GOTHA, 1715. German city. Com- 
memorating the third centennial of the 
execution of the reformer John Huss. 

5383 GREECE, 1833. Otto. First dollar. 
After its liberation from Turkish do- 
minion. _ 

534. GREECE, 1876. George. 

535. GREENLAND, 1771. Danish col- 
ony. For commercial reasons this coin 
was made to resemble the Spanish 
colonial piece of this period. 

586. GRISSONS, 1842. Swiss canton. 
Shooting contest dollar. 


555. HAMBURG, 1694. 

556. HAMBURG, 1730. On the second 
centennial of the Augsburg confession. 

557. HAMBURG, 1748. On the centen- 
tennial of the peace of Westphalia. 

558. HAMBURG, 1900. 

559. HANAU, 1623. German principal- 
ity. 

560. HANAU, 1784. William. 

561. HANOVER, 1855. Formerly the 
duchy of Brunswick. George V. 

562 HATZFELD, 1597. German princi- 
pality. Sebastian. 


563. HAWAII, 1883. Kalakaua I. King 
of the islands. 


11) 


‘‘DOLLARS OF THE WORLD’’ 


564. HAWAII, 1891. Pattern dollar of 
Queen Lilivocalania. 

565. HAWAII, 1893. Pattern dollar of 
Caivlania. 

566. HEERENBERG, 1546-86. Dutch 
principality. More properly known as 
S’Heerenberg. 


567. HEERENBERG, 1546-86. William 
IV. 


568. HELMSTEDT, 1676. City in the 
Netherlands. Memorial dollar. Struck 
by the university. 


569. HELVETIA (Switzerland), 1550. 
Early dollar of the Swiss federation. 


570. HELVETIA, 1798. Reverse of first 
dollar of the republic. 


571. HELVETIA, 1801. 
572. HELVETIA, 1855. 
573. HELVETIA, 1889. 
574. HELVETIA, 1900. 

575. HELVETIA, 1923. 

576. HENNEBERG, 1553. German prin- 
cipality. William VII. 

577. HENNEBERG, 1695, 

578. HENNEBERG, 1697. 

579. HERMANSTADT, 1611. City in 
Transylvania. Struck during a siege 
of the city. Arms of prince Gabriel 
Bathori. This coin has no reverse. 

580. HESSE-CASSEL, 1624. German 
principality. 

581. HESSE-CASSEL, 1630. Known as 


Pattern dollar. 


Pattern dollar. 


the whirl-wind dollar. Inscription: 
God will raise the weak. 

582. HESSE-CASSEL, 1754. William 
VIII. 

583. HESSE-CASSEL, 1765. Frederick 


Il. The Hessian troops employed by 
England during the American revolu- 
tionary war were hired from this prince. 


584. HESSE-CASSEL, 1778. Dollar used 
to pay the Hessian troops engaged in 
the revolutionary war. Known as the 
blood money dollar. 


585. HESSE-CASSEL, 1840. Arms of 
Hesse. 

586. HESSE-CASSEL, 1851. Frederick 
William I. 


587. HESSE-DARMSTADT, 1623. Ger- 
man principality. Louis V. 

588. HESSE-DARMSTADT, 1696. Min- 
ing dollar. 

589. HESSE-DARMSTADT, 1714. Ernest 
Louis. 


590. HESSE-DARMSTADT, 1825. Louis 
I 


591, HESSE-DARMSTADT, 1840. Louis 
II. 


592. HESSE-DARMSTADT, 1888. Louis — 
IV 


593. HESSE-DARMSTADT, 1904. Philip 
and Ernst. Commemorating the fourth 
centennial of the birth of landgrave 
Philip. i 

594. HILDESHEIM, 1624. German bish- 
opric. Ferdinand. 

595. HILDESHEIM, 1698, +, 

ua HILDESHEIM, 1766. Frederick Wil- 
lam. Z , 

597. HILDESHEIM, 1628. German city. 


598. HOHENLOE, 1609. German prin-— 
cipality. 


599. HOHENLOE-INGELFINGEN, 1796. — nf 


German principality. Frederick Louis. 
600. HOHENLOE-KIRCHBERG, 1781. 


German princpiality. Christian Fred- 
erick. 


601. HOHENLOE-LANGENBURG, 1751. 
German principality. On the associa- 
tion of three principalities. 

602. HOHENLOE-NEUENSTEIN, 1 6 9 7. 
German principality. Wolfgang. a 

603. HOHENLOE-OEHRINGEN, 1696. 
German principality. 

604. HOHENLOE-OEHRINGEN, 1 7 30. 
Commemorating the second anniversary 
of the Augsburg confession. . , 


605. HOHENLOE-OEHRINGEN, 1770. 
Louis Frederick. . 


606. HOHENLOE-OEHRINGEN, 1785. 


Louis Frederick. PISA ee 
607. HOHENLOE-OEHRINGEN, 179 7, 
Louis Frederick. 
608. HOHENLOE-WALDENBURG, 175 8. 
German principality. Convention dol- 
lar. Charles Albert. iS 
609. HOHENLOE-WEICKERSHEIM, 1752. 
German principality. Memorial dollar. 
Charles Louis. 


610. HOHENZOLLERN - HECHINGEN, 


1783. German principality. Joseph _ 


William. Ce 
611. HOHENZOLLERN - HECHINGEN, 


1804. Herman Frederick. 


612. HOHENZOLLERN-SIGMARINGEN, 
1844. German principality. Charles I. 


613. HOHNSTEIN, 1587. German prin- Sie 


cipality. 


614. HOLLAND, 1586. Province of the 
Netherlands. Earl of Leicester. eo ie 


615. HOLLAND, 1671. The edge of this 
coin bears the inscription: Death to 
those who cut the nerves of the re- 
public. | 

616. HOLLAND, 1680. 7‘ 

617. HOLLAND, 1790. Arms of the 
province. 3 Pees 


{12 


- 627. HONG KONG, 1900. 


«648. HUNGARY, 1900. 


618. HOLLAND, 1808. Kingdom estab- 
lished by Napoleon I, subsequently an- 
-mexed to France and later became the 
kingdom of the Netherlands. 

619. HOLLAND, 1809. Louis, brother of 

the emperor. 


620. HOLSTEIN-GOTTORP, 1614. Dan- 
ish province. John Adolph. 

621. HOLSTEIN-GOTTORP, 1622. Fred- 
erick III. 


622. HOLSTEIN-GOTTORP, 1753. Charles 
Peter. Afterwards Peter III of Russia. 
Inscription: Peter, by the grace of God, 
grand duke of all the Russias. 

623 HOLSTEIN-NORBURG, 1676. Dan- 
ish principality. From silver of the 
Holstein mines. 

624. HOLSTEIN-SONDERBURG, 1761. 
German principality. Frederick Charles. 


: _ 625. HONDURAS, 1881. Central Ameri- 


can state. 


626. HONG KONG, 1866. British Asiatic 
colony. Victoria, queen of England. 


British ori- 
ental trade dollar. 

628. HORNE, 1540-68. 
the Netherlands. 


629. HUNGARY, 1506. Independent 
kingdom until 1526. Under Austrian 
dominion until the great war. 


680. HUNGARY, 1554. Ferdinand I. First 
of the Austro-Hungarian kings. 


631. HUNGARY, 1565. War dollar. Dur- 
ing the war against Maximilian II. 


632. HUNGARY, 1585. Rudolph II. 
633. HUNGARY, 1599. Rudolph II. 
634. HUNGARY, 1614. Matthias. 
635, HUNGARY, 1619. 

636. HUNGARY, 1630. Ferdinand II. 
637. HUNGARY, 1657. Ferdinand III. 


6388. HUNGARY, 1664. Victory dollar. 
Struck by Leopold I. 


639. HUNGARY, 1682. Leopold I. 
640. HUNGARY, 1703. Leopold I. 
641, HUNGARY, 1717. Charles VI. 
642. HUNGARY, 1745. Maria Theresa. 
643. HUNGARY, 1782. 


644. HUNGARY, 1792. Arms of the 
Kingdom under Francis II. 


_ 645. HUNGARY, 1830. Francis I. 
_ 646. HUNGARY, 1837. Ferdinand I. 


ie 647. HUNGARY, 1896. Commemorating 
the 1000th year of the kingdom. Fran- 
cis Joseph. Pattern. 


Principality in 


649. HUNGARY, 1907. Francis Joseph. 
On the fortieth anniversary of his coro- 
nation as Hungarian king. 


aes. 
ie st: 
cal Spe 


DOLLARS OF 


THE WORLD’’ 


650. HU PEH, 1900. Chinese province. 

651. INDIA, 1600. Dollar of the East 
India Company, during the reign of 
Queen Elizabeth of England. The first 
dollar ever coined for foreign trading. 
This company founded the British col- 
ony of India. 

652. INDO-CHINA, 1903. French Asia- 
tic colony. 

653. INNSBRUCK, 1885. 
Shooting contest dollar. 

654. IRELAND, 1643. Necessity dollar 
struck by the lord lieutenant from 
silver plate. Crown and monogram of 
Charles I of England. 

655. IRELAND, 1644. Reverse of neces- 
sity dollar. V. S. signifies five shillings. 
These pieces were known as Ormonde 
money. “The Marquis of Ormonde was 
then lord lieutenant of Ireland. 

656. IRELAND, 1804. Dollar of the 
bank of Ireland. 

657. ISENBERG, 1811. 
pality. Charles. 

658. ISLES DE FRANCE ET BONAPARTE, 
1810. French colony in the Indian 
ocean. Necessity dollar. Struck by the 
French army. 

659. ITALY, 1810. Napoleon I. Crowned 
king of Italy in 1805. 

660. ITALY, 1814. Napoleon. 

661. ITALY, 1873. Victor Emanuel II. 
First ruler of the present kingdom 


established after the country’s libera- 
tion from Austria. 


662. ITALY, 1879. Humbert I. 

663. ITALY, 1911. Fiftieth anniversary 
of the establishment of the kingdom. 

664. ITALY, 1914. Victor Emanuel III. 

665. JAPAN, 1870. Pattern dollar. 

666. JAPAN, 1870. 

667. JAPAN, 1880. Trade dollar. 

668. JAPAN, 1880. 

669. JAVA, 1786. Dutch Asiatic colony. 
Dollar of the Dutch East India Com- 
pany. 

670. JEVER, 1798. German principality. 
671. JULIERS, CLEVES and BERG, 1475. 
German principalities. William IV. 
672. KAUFBEUREN, 1542. German city. 

Charles V. 

673. KEMPTON, 1694. German Abbey. 
Saint Hildegard. 

674. KEMPTON, 1748. Engelbert. 
675. KHEVENHULLER, 1771. German 
principality. John Joseph. 


676 KIANG NAN, 1894. Chinese prov- 
ince. 


Austrian city. 


German princi- 


13) 


‘DOLLARS OF THE WORLD oo 


677. KIRCHBERG, 1749. German prin- 
cipality. George Frederick. Commemo- 
rating the death of the burgrave. 


678. KIRIN, 1898. Chinese province. 


679. KWANG TUNG, 1894. Chinese 
province. 
680. LANDAU, 1713. German city. 


Struck by the duke of Wurtemburg 
while besieged by the French armies. 
681. LAUENBURG, 1645. German prin- 

cipality. Augustus. 


682. LAUSANNE, 1 87 6. 
Shooting contest dollar. 
683. LEEUWARDEN, 1580. Province of 
the Netherlands. Commemorating its 
liberation from Spanish rule. 

684. LEGHORN, 1659. Italian province 
(Tuscany). Ferdinand Il. 


Swiss city. 


685. LEGHORN, 1699. Cosmos III. 

686. LEGHORN, 1701. The rose dollar 
of Tuscany. 

687. LEGHORN, 1712. . 

688. LEGHORN, 1723. John Gaston. 

689. LEIPzIC, 1631. German city. 


Memorial dollar. Struck during the 
thirty years war. 
690. LEUCHTENBERG, 
principality. 

691. LEYDEN, 1574. City in the Neth- 
erlands. Commemorating a victory over 
the Spanish army. 


1547. German 


692. LIECHTENSTEIN, 1728. German 
principality. Joseph John. 

693. LIECHTENSTEIN, 1758. 

694. LIECHTENSTEIN, 1/778. Francis 
Joseph. 

695. LIECHTENSTEIN, 1924. John II. 


The only German principality surviv- 
ing the great war. 


696. LIEGE, 1550. Belgian bishopric. 
697. LIEGE, 1570. 

698. LIEGE, 1666. Arms of the bishop. 
699. LIEGE, 1668. Maximilian Henry. 
700. LIEGE, 1744. Sede Vacant. Saint 


Lambert, patron saint of the bishopric. 
701. LIGURIA, 1798. Italian republic 
founded by General Bonaparte. 


702. LIMA, 1808. City in Peru. Pro- 
claiming the fidelity of the city to 
Ferdinand VII, king of Spain. 


703. LIMA, 1821. Commemorating the 
independence of Peru. 


704. LIPPE-DETMOLD, 1658. German 
principality. Herman Adolph. 
705, LIPPE-DETMOLD, 1685. Simon 


Henry. 


> 


706. LIPPE-DETMOLD, 1713. Frederick 
Adolph. . 

707. LIPPE-SCHAUMBURG, 1802. Ger- 
man principality. Convention dollar. 

708. LIPPE - SCHAUMBURG, 1857. 
George William. On the fiftieth anni- 
versary of his reign. . 

709. LOBKOWITZ, 1794. Austrian prin- 
cipality. Francis Joseph. . 


710. LOMBARDY, 1848. Italian province. 


Dollar of the provisional government 
established during the attempted libera- 
tion of Italy. : 

711. LORRAINE, 1569. French princi- 
pality. Annexed to France in 1766, to 
Germany in 1871 and to France after 
the great war. 

712. LORRAINE, 1603. Charles II. 

713. LORRAINE, 1724. Leopold I. 


714. LOWENSTEIN-WERTHEIM, 1 6 er Mae | 


German principality. Memorial dollar. 
715. LOWENSTEIN-WERTHEIM, 1 7 6 6. 
A princess of this house was recently 
lost in an attempted aeroplane flight 
over the Atlantic. 

716. LUBEC, 1730. German bishopric. 
Henry. . 

717. LUBEC, 1775. Monogram of the 
bishop Frederick Augustus. 

718. LUBEC, 1537. Germancity. This 
coin is known as the gadfly dollar, so 
called because the gadfly appears in the 
inscription and was the name of the 
burgomaster. a 

719. LUBEC, 1559, Saint John with the 
lamb. ey a 

720. LUBEC, 1631. 

721. LUBEC, 1730. On the second cen- 
tennial of the Augsburg confession. 

722, LUBEC, 1752, 

723. LUBEC, 1904. cing aA | 

724. LUCCA, 1744. Italian province. 
Saint Martin dividing his cloak with a 
beggar. . Deere . 

725. LUCCA, 1753. Arms of the prov- — 
ince. oa 

726. LUCCA, 1756. 

727. LUCCA and PIOMBINO, 1805. Ital- 
ian principality established by Napo- 
leon. His sister Elisa and her husband. 

728. LUCCA and PIOMBINO, 1807. — 

729. LUCERNE, 1622. Swiss canton. 

730. LUCERNE, 1796. 

731. LUCERNE, 1814. 

732. LUCERNE, 1816. 


733. LUGANO, 1883. Swiss city. 
Shooting contest dollar. ; 


{14 


784. LUNEBURG, 1547. German city. 
Named after the moon (Luna) which 
is featured on its coins. 
735. LUXEMBURG, 1795. Principality 
between France and Germany. Neces- 
sity dollar. Struck by the Austrians 
during war with France. Inscription 
denotes monetary value of the coin. 
736. LUXEMBURG, 1889. Arms of the 
duchy. Pattern. 
_ %37. MADAGASCAR, 1883. Island in the 
fe. Indian ocean. 
«788. MADAGASCAR, 1886.  Ranavona 
fe iii, queen of the island. Pattern. 
739. MADRAS, 1800. Province of India. 
940. MAESTRECHT, 1794. City in the 
Netherlands. During the siege by the 
French revolutionary armies under Gen- 
eral Kleber. 
9741. MAGDEBURG, 1585. German arch- 
bishopric. Joachim Frederick. 
742. MAGDEBURG, 1638. Memorial dol- 
poe dar. 
743. MAGDEBURG, 1638. German city. 
g Commemorating its reconstruction after 
it was destroyed by the imperial forces 
under Tilly. 
i 744, MAGDEBURG, 1681. Memorial 
dollar. Struck by the great elector, 
Frederick William of Brandenburg. 
_ ]45. MAJORCA, 1808. One of the Ba- 
- learic Islands. War dollar during Na- 
__ poleon’s invasion of Spain. 
746. MAJORCA, 1808. War dollar. Arms 
of Aragon and Majorca. 
947. MAJORCA, 1821. War dollar. 
Struck by Ferdinand VII of Spain. 
748. MALTA, 1723. Mediterranean Is- 
land. Antoine Manoel. 
749. MALTA, 1738. Raimond Despuig. 
9750. MALTA, 1757. Saint John. In- 
- scription: None greater hath risen. 
751. MALTA, 1790. Emanuel de Rohan. 
752. MALTA, 1798. Ferdinand Homp- 
 esch. Last master of the knights of 
Malta. After an existence of nearly 
three hundred years, this order was sup- 
_ pressed by General Bonaparte. 


ince, 


_ 954. MANSFIELD, 1589. 
i 7 cipality. 


Be 755. MANSFIELD, 1609. 
156. MANSFIELD, 1619. 
4 pa: 57. MANSFIELD, 1623. 
758. MANSFIELD, 1662. 


| Es, 759. MANTUA, 1578. Italian state. Vin- 
iy cent I. 


German prin- 


SOLLARS OF THE WORLD’ 


760. MANTUA, 1612. 

761. MANTUA, 1612. Inscription: Con- 
tinual light. 

762. MANTUA, 1627. Inscription: Hos- 
tile when armed. 

763, MANTUA, 1628. The sun, the 
world and the zodiac. Inscription: I 
do not retreat nor deviate. 

764. MANTUA, 1629. Struck by the 
city of Mantua during its siege by 
Ferdinand II of Austria. 

765. MANTUA, 1629. Siege dollar of 
the city of Mantua. 
766. MANTUA, 1637-47. 

Charles II. 

767. MANTUA, 1666. Isabella and Fer- 
dinand Charles. 

768. MANTUA, 1675. 

769. MANTUA, 1703. 

770. MAYENCE, 1637. German arch- 
bishopric. Anselm Casimir. 

771. MAYENCE, 1685.. Anselm Francis. 

772. MAYENCE, 1765. Armsofthearch- 
bishop. 

773. MAYENCE, 1768. Emeric Joseph. 

774. MAYENCE, 1794. Coined from 
church silver to meet contributions 
levied by the French armies. Frederick 
Charles. 


ae MAYENCE, 1794. Convention dol- 

ar. 

776. MAYENCE, 1795. Memorial dol- 
lar. In honor of General Clairfait. 
777. MAYENCE, 1796. Frederick Charles. 
778. MAYENCE, 1808. Charles. First 
premier of the Confederation of the 

Rhine, established by Napoleon I. 

779. MECCA, 1920. City in Asia Minor. 

780. MECKLENBURG, 1540. German 
state. Henry V. 

781. MECKLENBURG, 1543. Albert VII. 
782. MECKLENBURG-GUSTROW, 1549. 
German principality. John Albert I. 
783. MECKLENBURG-SCHWERIN, 1623. 
German principality. Adolph Fred- 
erick. 

784. MECKLENBURG-SCHWERIN, 1749. 
Christian Louis I. 

785. MECKLENBURG- SCHWERIN, 1904. 
Frederick Francis IV. On the marriage 
of the duke. 

786. MECKLENBURG-SCHWERIN, 1915. 
Frederick Francis IV. In honor of his 
ancestor Frederick Francis I. 

787. MECKLENBURG-STRELITZ, 1717. 
German principality. Commemorating 


the second centennial of the reforma- 
tion. 


Maria and 


“415 } 


‘‘DoLLARS OF THE WORD. 


788. METZ, 1638. German city before 
its annexation to France in 1648. 

739. METZ, 1639. Arms of the city. 

790. MEXICO, 1739. Under Philip V 
of Spain. 

791. MEXICO, 1759. 
VI. 

792. MEXICO, 1763. Under Charles III. 

793. MEXICO, 1808. Charles IV. 

794. MEXICO, 1809. Ferdinand VII. 

795. MEXICO, 1821. Ferdinand VIL. 
Last Spanish ruler of Mexico. 

796. MEXICO, 1822. Augustin. Elected 
constitutional emperor and executed 
two years thereafter. 

797. MEXICO, 1822. Reverse of first 
dollar of independent Mexico. 

798. MEXICO, 1824. Dollar of the pro- 
visional government. 

799. MEXICO, 1824. Guadalupe Victor. 
president. Dollar of the first republic. 

800. MEXICO, 1866. Maximilian. Dol- 
lar of the empire established by Napo- 
leon II]. Overthrown by the Mexicans 
after the departure of the French 
troops. Maximilian was executed after 
a reign of three years. 

801. MEXICO, 1870. Second republic. 

802. MEXICO, 1889. 

803. MEXICO, 1909. 

s04. MEXIco, 1910. 

805. MEXICO, 1921. On the centennial 
of Mexican independence. 

806. MEXICO, 1760. Mexican city. Pro- 
claiming the coronation of Charles Tit: 

807. MEXICO, 1789. Proclaiming the 
coronation of Charles IV. 

808. MEXICO, 1789. Coronation procla- 
mation dollar. 

809. MEXICO, 1789. Coronation procia- 
mation dollar struck by the Council of 
Commerce, 

810. MEXICO, 1789. Coronation procla- 
mation dollar struck by the Royal Min- 
ing Tribunal. 

811. MEXICO, 1808. Proclaiming the 
coronation of Ferdinand VII. 


812. MEXICO, 1823. Augustin I. Pro- 
claiming his coronation as emperor. 


813. MEXICO, 1823. Struck by the 
Council of State on the coronation of 
Augustin I and the empress. 

814. MIDDLEBURG, 1572. City in the 
Netherlands. War dollar. Struck by 
the Spaniards when besieged by the 
Dutch. 


Under Ferdinand 


815. MILAN, 1588. Italian state. Philip 
Il. The kings of Spain were at that 
time dukes of Milan. 


816. MILAN, 1605. Arms of the duchy. 
817. MILAN, 1608. Philip III. 
818. MILAN, 1622. Philip IV. 


819. MILAN, 1666. Charles II and 
Maria Ann, his mother. 


' $20. MILAN, 1694. Charles Il. | 


821. MILAN, 1707. Charles III, arch 
duke of Austria, as claimant to the 
Spanish throne. 


822. MILAN, 1728. Charles VI. Austro- 
Hungarian emperor who acquired the 
duchy by the treaty of Rastadt. — 


823. MILAN, 1744. Maria Theresa of 
Austria. 


824. MODENA, 1631. Italian state. 

825. MODENA, 1721. Raynaldo. 

826. MODENA, 1739. Francis III. 

827. MODENA, 1795. Hercules III. 

828. MOLDAVIA, 1597. Now Roumania. 
Sigismund. a 

$29. MONACO, 1653. Principality on the 
Mediterranean sea. Honore II. . 

830. MONACO, 1678. Arms of the prin- 
cipality. ; 

831. MONACO, 1837. Honore V. 

832. MONTENEGRO, 1909. Now in 
Jugo-Slavia. Nicholas I. 

833. MONTFORT, 1621. German princi- 
pality. 


834. MONTFORT, 1759. Francis Xavier. — 


835. Morocco, 1884. North African 
state. Now French protectorate. Dated 
according to the Mohammedan calendar. 


836. MOROCCO, 1898. 

837. Morocco, 1914. : 

838. MULHOUSE, 1623. German city. 

839. MUNSTER, 1634. German bish- 
opric. 

840. MUNSTER, 1661. 

$41. MUNSTER, 1706. On the death of 
the bishop. 

842. MUNSTER, 1761. 

843. MUNSTER, 1534. German city. 
Struck by John of Leyden, king of the 
Anabaptists, during his control of the 
city. 

844. MUNSTER, 1648. On the peace of 
Westphalia, which concluded the thirty 


years war. The treaty was signed at 
Munster. 

845. MUNSTER, 1660. War dollar. 
Struck during a revolt against the 
authority of the bishop. ; 


~{ 16 be 


846. MUNSTERBERG-OELS, 1620. Ger- 
man principality. Henry and Charles. 

847. MURBACH and LUDERS, 1614-25. 
German abbey. 

848. MYSORE, 1784. Province of India. 
849 NAPLES and SICILY, 1554-88. 


Italian states, then under the dominion 

‘i of the Spanish kings. Philip II. 
$50. NAPLES and SICILY, 1684. The 
two hemispheres and bearing the in- 

- scription: One not sufficient. Struck 

= 7 -by Charles IL 

- $51. NAPLES and SICILY, 1689. Charles 

o Tk: 

852. NAPLES and SICILY, 1693. Order 

‘ of the golden fleece. 

853. NAPLES and SICILY, 1715. Charles 
VI of Austria became king of these 
provinces in 1714. 

854. NAPLES and SICILY, 1730. 
- 855. NAPLES and SICILY, 1749. 

856. NAPLES and SICILY, 1750. Charles 
III of the Bourbon house. 

857. NAPLES and SICILY, 1798. Ferdi- 
oie mand IV. 

858. NAPLES and SICILY, 1799. Dollar 
of the republic. 
- $59. NAPLES and SICILY, 1805. 
— nand IV. After his restoration. 

- 860. NAPLES and SICILY, 1808. Joseph. 
Brother of the French emperor. 

861. NAPLES and SICILY, 1810. Joachim 

Murat. After Joseph ascended the 
Spanish throne. 

862. NAPLES and SICILY, 1813. Joachim 
a Murat. 

_ 868. NAPLES and SICILY, 1817. Ferdi- 
-nand I. Second restoration. 
864. NAPLES and SICILY, 1818. 
of the kingdom. 

65. NAPLES and SICILY, 1825. Francis 


Ferdi- 


Arms 


a 866 NAPLES and SICILY, 1852. Ferdi- 
— nand IL. 


867. NAPLES and SICILY, 1859 Francis 
Il. Last coinage of the kingdom. 
868. NASSAU, 1681. German state. Five 
brothers of the ruling House. 

869. NASSAU, 1811. Frederick William. 
. NASSAU, 1811. Frederick Augus- 


871. NASSAU, 1817. 
872. NASSAU, 1833. 
__- $78. NASSAU, 1854. Adolph. 

874. NASSAU, 1860. Armsoftheduchy. 


8 NAVARRE, 1654. French province. 
- Baus XIV. 


William. 


A DOLLARS, OF 


THE WORLD’’ 


876. NAVARRE, 1718. Louis XV. 

877. NETHERLANDS, 1830. Present 
kingdom founded after separation from 
France in 1814. William I. 

878. NETHERLANDS, 1840. 
the kingdom. 

879. NETHERLANDS, 1842. William IL 

880. NETHERLANDS, 1852. William III. 

881. NETHERLANDS, 1898. Wilhelmina. 

882. NEUCHATEL, 1713. Frederick I, 
king of Prussia, who inherited this 
Swiss principality. 

883. NEUCHATEL, 1810. Alexandre 
Berthier, marshal of the first French 
empire received the principality from 
Napoleon. Pattern. 

884. NEUSS, 1556. 


Arms of 


German city. 


885. NEW GRENADA, 1837. South 
American state. 

886. NEW GRENADA, 1848. Arms of 
the republic. 

887. NICARAGUA, 1849-51. Central 


American state. Arms of the republic 
counter stamped on old Mexican dollar. 

888. NICARAGUA, 1912. 

889. NIDWALDEN, 1861. Swiss canton. 
Shooting contest dollar, depicting the 
death of Arnold Winkelried. 

890. NIMWEGEN, 1690. City in the 
Netherlands. 


891. NORWAY, 1629. Under Danish do- 
minion until annexed to Sweden in 
1812. Independent since 1905. Chris- 
tian IV. 

892. NORWAY, 1655. Frederick III. 

893. NORWAY, 1661. The Norwegian 
lion. Inscription: The Lord provides. 

894. NORWAY, 1676. Christian V. 

895. NORWAY, 1693. Arms of the king- 
dom. Inscription: Piety and justice. 


896. NORWAY, 1694. Monogram of 
Christian V. 


897. NORWAY, 1695. Christian V. 
898. NORWAY, 1704. Frederick IV. 
899. NORWAY, 1733. Christian VI. 
900. NORWAY, 1749. Frederick V. 


901. NORWAY, 1781. Inscription: New 
silver money of the Danish kingdom. 

902. NORWAY, 1788. Christian VII. 

903. NORWAY, 1821. Charles XIV. 


Previously marshal Bernadotte of the 
first French empire. 


904. NORWAY, 1833. Charles XIV. 


905. NORWAY, 1844. Charles XIV. Last 
year of his reign. 


906. NORWAY, 1846. Oscar I. 


of 17 Ye 


‘‘DOLLARS OF THE WORLD 


907. NORWAY, 1861. Charles XV. In- 
scription: A country must be built by 
law. 

908. NOSTITZ, 1719. 

pality. Antoni John. 

“909. NUREMBURG, 1575. German city. 

‘910. NUREMBURG, 1632. Struck by 
Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, 
during his occupation of the city. 


German princi- 


- 911. NUREMBURG, 1635. 
912. NUREMBURG, 1650. Memorialdol-_ 


lar. In honor of the emperor Ferdi- 
nand III. 


913. NUREMBURG, 1680. 
914. NUREMBURG, 1693. 


915. NUREMBURG, 1710.. Commemo- 
rative dollar. 

916. NUREMBURG, 1721. 

917. NUREMBURG, 1742. Charles VII. 
Holy Roman Emperor. This is the 


reverse of the coin. 

918. NUREMBURG, 1673. Memorial 
peace dollar. 

920. NUREMBURG, 1768. 

921. OETTINGEN, 1542. German prin- 
cipality. 

922. OETTINGEN, 1624. 

923. OETTINGEN, 1694. 

924. OETTINGEN, 1759. John Aloys I. 
Convention dollar. 

925. OLDENBURG, 1660. North Euro- 
pean state. Anton Gunther. 

926. OLDENBURG, 1901. As part of 
the German empire. Frederick August. 

927. OLMUTZ, 1695. Austrian arch- 
bishopric. Charles. 

928. OLMUTZ, 1701. Arms of arch- 
bishop, Charles, duke of Lorraine. 

929. OLMUTZ, 1704. Charles. 

930. OLMUTZ, 1722. Wolfgang. 

931. OLMUTZ, 1744. Jacob. 

932. OLMUTZ, 1820. Rudolph. Last 
coinage of the bishops. 

933. ORANGE, 1650. French principal- 
ity. Annexed to France in 1713. Wil- 
liam. 

934. ORANGE FREE STATE, 1887. 
South Africa. Pattern. 

935. ORTENBERG, 1656. German prin- 
cipality. Christopher. 

936. OSNABRUCK, 1682. German bish- 
opric. Ernest Augustus, bishop, and 
duke-of Brunswick. One of the illus- 
trious men of his time. 

937. OSNABRUCK, 1698. Sede Vacant. 


988. OSNABRUCK, 1715. Sede Vacant. 
Representing Charlemagne. 


939. OSNABRUCK, 1633. German city. 
Victory dollar. In honor of Gustavus 
Adolphus, king of Sweden. 

940. OVERYSSEL, 1563. Province of the 
Netherlands under Philip I, king of 
Spain. . 

941. PAAR, 1771. German principality. 
John Wenzel. 

942, PADERBORN, 1663. German bish- 
opric. | 

948. PADERBORN, 1693. Saint Anthony 
entering Heaven and being received by 
Mary and the Saviour. 


944. PADERBORN, 1719. Sede Vacant. — He 


945. PALATINATE, 1547. German state. 
Frederick II. 

946. PALATINATE, 1579. John Casi- 
mir. 
947. PALATINATE, 1667. CharlesLouis, — 

during whose reign most of the cities 
of the province were destroyed by 
marshal ‘Turenne. 
948. PALATINATE, 1711. John William. 
949. PALATINATE, 1740. Albert and 
Philip. Vicars of the Holy Roman Em- 
pire. 
950. PALATINATE, 1765. Christian TV. — 
951. PALATINATE, 1790. Charles The- 


odore. pies 
952. PALATINATE, 1792. Arms of the 
province. ; i 
953. PALATINATE, 1805. Maximilian — 
Joseph. 


954. PALATINATE-NEUBURG, 1624. 
German principality. Inscription: I am 


consoled in God. Wolfgang William. — 


955. PALATINATE - ZWEIBRUCKEN, | 
1623. German principality. John II. 


956. PANAMA, 1904. Dollar of the re-- 
public. Balboa. 

957. PARAGUAY, 1854. South American 
state. 

958. PARAGUAY, 1889. : 

959. PARMA, 1605. Italian state. 

960. PARMA, 1796. Ferdinand I. : 

961. PARMA, 1815. Marie Louise. Sec- 
ond wife of Napoleon I. Created 
duchess of this province after his exile 
to St. Helena. 


962. PARMA, 1858. Robert and Louise, 
regent. Last of the dukes of Parma. 


968. PARRAL, 1913. Mexican city. War — 
dollar. Struck by General Villa. 


964. PASSAU, 1701. German bishopric. i 
John Philip. 


965. PASSAU, 1703. Arms of the bishop. _ 
966. PASSAU, 1723. Joseph Dominic. 
967. PASSAU, 1761. Sede Vacant. 


{18 


—OOLLARS OR 


PASSAU, 1779. Leopold Ernest. 

PASSAU, 1792. Joseph. 

PEI YANG, 1896. Chinese province. 

PERSIA, 1894. 'Nassir. 

PERSIA, 1902. Mussafer. Pattern. 
. PERSIA, 1902. 

974. PERSIA, 1904. Mussafer. 

- 975. PERU, 1689. Under Spanish rule. 
These coins were known as pieces of 
eight (reals). Holed for trading with 
the Peruvian indians, who wore them 
around their necks, 

_ 976. PERU, 1690. Under Charles II of 
a Spain. 

_ 977. PERU, 1775. Under Charles III. 
_ 978. PERU, 1822. First dollar after lib- 
eration from Spain. 

_ 979. PERU, 1826. 
_ 980. PERU, 1836. Arms of the republic. 

981. PERU, 1847. 

- 982. PERU, 1852. Commemorating the 
adoption of the civil code. 

983. PERU, 1880. 

984. PERU, 1893. . 

985. PHILIPPINES, 1855. Under Span- 
ish rule, Pattern. 

986. PHILIPPINES, 1897. Last dollar as 
Spanish colony. 

987. PHILIPPINES, 1904. Under the 
present government. 

988. PIACENZA, 1591. Italian province. 
Alexander, duke of Parma, opponent of 
William the silent in the Netherlands. 


; --nand I, grand duke of Tuscany. 


992. POLAND, 1585. First dollar of the 
kingdom. Stephen Bathori. 


998. POLAND, 1621. Sigismund III. 
994. POLAND, 1630. Sigismund III. 
995. POLAND, 1633. Arms of the king- 


996. POLAND, 1641. Vladislaus IV. 
997. POLAND, 1649. John Casimir. 
998. POLAND, 1650. John Casimir. Ab- 


dicted, retired to France and became 
the abbot of St. Germain. 

999. POLAND, 1702. Augustus II. 
1000. POLAND, 1702. Monogram of 
Augustus IT. 

1001. POLAND, 1755. Augustus III. 
moe2e02. POLAND, (17 66. Stanislaus 
Augustus. Last of the national kings. 


THE WORLD’”’ 


1008. POLAND, 1/776. Stanislaus 
Augustus. 

1004. POLAND, 1793. Struck by the 
Targowitz Confederation, which at- 
tempted to re-establish Polish independ- 
ence under Russian protection. Kos- 
ciuzko, who had previously served un- 
der Washington in the revolutionary 
war was killed during this conflict. 

1005. POLAND, 1795. Struck during 
the war for independence. The king- 
dom was finally partitioned between 
Austria, Prussia and Russia. Now again 
independent. 

1006. POLAND, 1823. Alexander I. 
Czar of Russia, king of Poland. 

1007. POLAND, 1835. 

1008. POLAND, 1836. Royal family of 
Nicholas I. Czar of Russia and king of 
Poland. 

1009. POMERANIA, 1617. North Euro- 
pean state. On the centennial of the 
reformation. 

1010. POMERANIA, 1635.  Bogislaus 
XIV, 

1011. POMERANIA, 1642. Christina, 
queen of Sweden, duchess of this prov- 
ince. 

1012. PORTO RICO, 1895. Last coinage 
under Spanish rule. 

1013. PORTUGAL, 1640-56. First Por- 
tuguese dollar. Struck by John IV, 
who was elected king of Portugal after 
its separation from Spain. Brazil taken 
from the Dutch in his reign. 

1014. PORTUGAL, 1689. Arms of the 
independent kingdom. 

1015. PORTUGAL, 1838. Maria II. 

1016. PORTUGAL, 1898. Carlos and 
Amelia. On the fourth centennial of di 
Gamma’s discovery of route to India. 

1017. PORTUGAL, 1899. Carlos I. 

1018. PORTUGAL, 1910. Emanual II. 
Last of the Portuguese kings. Com- 
memorating the centennial of the war 
with France. 


1019. PORTUGAL, 1910. First dollar of 
the republic. 

1020. PORTUGAL, 1915. 

1021. POTOSI, 1808. City in Bolivia. 
Proclaiming its fidelity to Ferdinand 
VII of Spain. 

1022. POTOSI, 1811. Proclamation dol- 
lar of General Barreda. | 

1028. POTOSI, 1816. Proclaiming the 
Spanish king’s appreciation of the serv- 
ices rendered by the city. 

1024. POTOSI, 1825. In honor of Gen- 
eral Bolivar, on its liberation from 
Spanish rule. 


19: 


‘‘DOLLARS OF THE WORLD’? 


1025. POTOSI, 1852. In honor of presi- 
dent Belzu. 

1026. POTOSI, 1865. 
eral Melgarejo. 

1027. PRUSSIA, 1701. FrederickI. First 
king of Prussia. 

1028. PRUSSIA, 1703. The Prussian 
black eagle. 

1029. PRUSSIA, 1705. 
Frederick I. 

1030. PRUSSIA, 1720. 
liam I. 

1031. PRUSSIA, 1751. Dollar of the 
Embden Asiatic Trading Company. 
Oriental trade dollar. 

1082. PRUSSIA, 1764. Frederick II, 
known as Frederick the Great. The 
most famous of Prussia’s kings and one 
of the ablest generals of modern times, 
under whose rule Prussia became one 
of the most powerful European states. 

1033. PRUSSIA, 1765. Frederick II. 
Dollar of the bank of Berlin. 

1034. PRUSSIA, 1767. Frederick II. 
For trading with Russia and Livonia. 

1035. PRUSSIA, 1767. Frederick II. 
For trading in the orient. 

1036. PRUSSIA, 1785. 

1037. PRUSSIA, 1791. 

1038. PRUSSIA, 1795. 
liam II. 

1039. PRUSSIA, 179 7. 
trading. 

1040. PRUSSIA, 1799. 
liam III. 

1041. PRUSSIA, 1839. 
liam III. 

1042. PRUSSIA, 1850. 
liam IV. 

1043. PRUSSIA, 1859. 

1044. PRUSSIA, 1870. £4William I. 
Founded the North German Confeder- 
acy in 1866 and the German empire in 
1871. Bismarck served under him. 

1045. PRUSSIA, 1874. William I. 

1046. PRUSSIA, 1888. Frederick. 

1047. PRUSSIA, 1888. William II. 

1048. PRUSSIA, 1901. William II. On 
the second centennial of the founding 
of the kingdom. 

1049. PRUSSIA, 1913. William II. 
Last German emperor and last king of 
Prussia. | 

1050. PRUSSIA, 1913. William II. Pat- 
tern dollar. 

1051. QUEDLINBURG, 1704. 
abbey. Anna Dorothea. 


In honor of Gen- 


Monogram of 


Frederick Wil- 


Frederick Wil- 

For oriental 
Frederick Wil- 
Frederick Wil- 


Frederick Wil- 


German 


1057. RATISBON, 1786. 


1052. RAGUSA, 1736. Province of Dal- 
matia. Saint Biagio. 


1058. RAGUSA, 1747. 
1054. RAGUSA, 1774. 
1055. RAGUSA, 1794. 


1056. RATISBON, 1547. 
opric. 


German bish- 


Anton Igna- 
tius. a 
1058. RATISBON, 1787. 
Saint Peter in boat. 
1059. RATISBON, 1809. Charles. First 
premier of the Confederation of the 
Rhine, established by Napoleon. 
1060. RATISBON, 1586. German city. 
1061. RATISBON, 1696. Crossed keys 
symbolize this city. 
1062. RATISBON, 1759. 
1068. RATISBON, 1775. 
1064. RATISBON, 1793. Francis II of 
Austria. This is the reverse of the 
coin. 
1065. RATZBURG, 1623. 
1066. RECKHEIM, 1540. 
Netherlands, 
1067. RETEGNO, 1676. Italian princi- 
pality. Teodoro Trivulzio. 
1068. RETEGNO, 1686. Arms of the 
principality. | ee 
1069. RETEGNO, 1726. Antonius Tri- 
vulzio. RY 
1070. REUSS-EBERSDORF, 1812. Ger- 
man principality. Arms of the house. — 
1071. REUSS-EBERSDORF, 1847. Henry 
LXXII. The seventy-second prince of 
this House bearing the name of Henry. 


Sede Vacant. 


German city. 
City in the © 


1072. REUSS-GREIZ, 1619. German 
principality. 
1078. REUSS-GREIZ, 1698. Henry VI. 


Commemorating the death of the duke 
on the battlefield. 
1074. REUSS-GREIZ, 1769. Heart 
1075. REUSS-GREIZ, 1812. Henry XIII. 
1076. REUSS-GREIZ, 1848. Henry XX. | 
1077. REUSS-SCHLEIZ, 1679. German 
principality. The only known coin de- 
picting the Almighty. To the left is 
the sun inscribed: Jesus. To the right, 


a dove symbolizing the Holy Ghost. vacey 
Struck 


The Almighty in the center. 
in honor of the Trinity. 

1078. REUSS-SCHLEIZ, 1844. Henry | 
LXII. 

1079. RIGA, 1660. City on the Baltic 
sea. At this time under Swedish rule. 
Struck on the coronation of Charles xT 
of Sweden. 


{20 » 


MmOOLULARS. OR 


1080. RIO DE LA PLATA, 1815. After- 
wards Argentine Republic. 

1081. ROME, 1588. The Papal states. 
First dollar of the popes. Sixtus V. 

1082. ROME, 1635. Urban VIII. 

1083. ROME, 1646. Innocent X. 

1084. ROME, 1655-67. Arms of Alex- 
ander VII. 

1085. ROME, 1667-69. Dollar of Cle- 
ment [X. Saint Peter’s throne. 

1086. ROME, 1669. Sede Vacant. Arms 
of the cardinal. 

1087. ROME, 1671. Clement X. 

1088. ROME, 1672. Inscription: May 
more abound. 


1089. ROME, 1673. Pius V receiving 
news of the victory over the Turks at 
Lepanto. Struck by Clement X. 

1090. ROME, 1675. Saint Peter and 
Saint Paul guarding the closed holy 
door. 

1091. ROME, 1675. Pilgrims entering 
the open holy door. 


1092. ROME, 1676. Sede Vacant. 


1093. ROME, 1676-89. On the defeat 
of the Turks at Vienna. 

1094. ROME, 1676. Innocent XI. 

1095. ROME, 1677. Saint Peter’s ca- 
thedral at Rome. Inscription: Gates of 
Hell shall not prevail. 


1096. ROME, 1678. Christ quieting the 
sea. Inscription: The wind and sea 
obey Him. 

1097. ROME, 1680. Saint Peter en- 
throned. 


1098. ROME, 1690. Alexander VIII. 
Commemorating the pontiff’s aid to 
the Venetian army. 

1099. ROME, 1694. Innocent XII. 

1100. ROME, 1696. ‘The pope and the 
cardinals. 

1101. ROME, 1698. Peter bestowing 
benediction. 


1102. ROME, 1699. On the restoration 
of the port of Anzo. 


1103. ROME, 1700. Sede Vacant. 


1104. ROME, 1707. Saint Clement be- 
fore the Sacred lamb. 


1105. ROME, 1711. City of Castiglione. 


1106. ROME, 1713. Inscription: With 
a fountain he adorned the public square. 


1107. ROME, 1715. Clement XI. 
1108. ROME, 1731. Clement XII. 
1109. ROME, 1753. Benedict XIV. 


1110. ROME, 1759. Arms of Clement 
XIII. 


1111. ROME, 1780. Dollar of Pius VI. 


THE WORLD’’ 


1112. ROME, 1799. Dollar of the Ro- 
man Republic established by the French 
revolutionary army. 


1113. ROME, 1816. Arms of Pius VII. 
In 1809 Napoleon annexed the Papal 
states to the French empire and brought 
the pope to France. After the em- 
peror’s abdication in 1814 the states 
were restored to Pius VII. 


1114. ROME, 1823. Sede Vacant. Arms 
of the cardinal. 

1115. ROME, 1825. Leo XII. 

1116. ROME, 1829. Sede Vacant. 

1117. ROME, 1830, Pius VIII. 

1118. ROME, 1830. Sede Vacant. 


1119. ROME, 1831. The Holy Family. 
Inscription: To enlighten the Gentiles. 


1120. ROME, 1845. Gregory XVI. 
1121. ROME, 1846. Sede Vacant. The 


cardinal’s arms. 

1122, ROME, 1850. Pius IX, 

1123. ROME, 1870. Annexed to Italy 
in this year. Last coinage of the popes. 


1124. ROME, 1878. Leo XIII. Pattern 
dollar. 


1125. ROSTOCK, 1637. German city. 

1126. ROUMANIA, 1881. Charles I. 

41127. ROUMANIA, 1883. Arms of the 
kingdom. 

1128. ROUMANIA, 1906. Charles I. On 
the fortieth anniversary of his reign. 
1129. RUSSIA, 1675. First Russian dol- 

lar. Struck by the czar Alexis. 
1130. RUSSIA, 1705. Peter I (the great) 
at the beginning of his reign. 
1131. RUSSIA, 1707. Peter I. 
1132. RUSSIA, 1719. Peter I. 
1138. RUSSIA, 1721. Commemorating 


the signing of treaty of peace with 
Sweden. 


1184. RussIA, 1725. 


T1856. RUSSIA) (17252) Peter le ase 
reigning year of the czar who founded 
the Russian empire and signally ad- 
vanced its civilization. 


1136. RUSSIA, 1726. CatherineI. In- 
scription: Catherine, empress and auto- 
crat of Russia. 


1137. RUSSIA, 1726. Catherine I. 
1138. RUSSIA, 1727. Peter II. 


1189. RUSSIA, 1728. Monogram of 
Peter II. 


1140. RUSSIA, 1731. Anne. 
1141. RUSSIA, 1734. Anne. 
1142. RUSSIA, 1738. Anne. 


“{ 21 }» 


‘*DOLLARS OF THE WORLD’’ 


1148. RUSSIA, 1741. John III. Infant 
czar for three months. These coins were 
recalled by his successor, Elizabeth, who 
imposed a penalty for noncompliance. 

1144. RUSSIA, 1742. Elizabeth. 

1145. RUSSIA, 1754. Elizabeth. 

1146. RUSSIA, 175 8. The Russian 
eagle. : 

1147. RUSSIA, 1759. Commemorating 
the Russian victory over Frederick the 
Great at Kunersdorf. 

1148. RUSSIA, 1762. Peter III. 

1149. RUSSIA, 1762. Catherine II. One 
of Russia’s most illustrious rulers. The 
great Catherine ascended the throne 
after having caused the assassination of 
her husband Peter III. She projected 
the partition of Poland. 


1150. RUSSIA, 1796. Catherine II. 


1151. RUSSIA, 1796. Under Paul I. 
Dollar of the bank of Russia. 


1152. RUSSIA, 1797. Inscription: Not 
to us, not to us, but to Thy name. 
Struck by czar Paul who was assassi- 
nated because of his projected alliance 
with Napoleon Bonaparte. 


1153. RUSSIA, 1813. Dollar of Alex- 
ander I, who burned Moscow during 
the French invasion of 1812. 


1154 RUSSIA, 1827. 
1155. RUSSIA, 1834. Nicholas I. 
1156. RUSSIA, 1 859. Alexander II. 
Abolished servage in Russia. Ceded 
Alaska to the United States. Assassi- 
nated by the nihilists. 
1157. RUSSIA, 1868. 
1158. RUSSIA, 1883. 
lar of Alexander III. 
1159. RUSSIA, 1887. Alexander III. 
1160. RUSSIA, 1895. Nicholas II. 
1161. RUSSIA, 1913. Nicholas II. The 


last of the czars. Romanoff jubilee 
dollar. 


1162. ST. GALL, 1777. Swiss abbey. 
1163. ST. GALL, 1780. Arms of the 
abbot. 


1164. SALVADOR, 1892. Central Amer- 
ican state. 


1165. SALVADOR, 1894. Columbus. 


1166. SALZBURG, 1522. Austrian arch- 
bishopric. Mathew Lang first bishop to 
strike silver dollars. 


1167. SALZBURG, 1550. Arms of arch- 
bishop Ernest. 


1168. SALZBURG, 1587. Arms of arch- 
bishop Wolfgang Theodore. 


Coronation dol- 


1169. SALZBURG, 1593. Struck by the 
arch-bishop to pay his troops. Tower 
withstanding the four winds. 

1170. SALZBURG, 1594. 

1171. SALZBURG, 1623. 
arch-bishop Paris. 

1172. SALZBURG, 1697. i 

1173. SALZBURG, 1712. Francis Anton. 


1174. SALZBURG, 1729. 
with salt box. Salzburg (salt town) 
so named for its salt mines. 

1175. SALZBURG, 1738. Leopold. 

1176. SALZBURG, 1748. Andreas. 

1177. SALZBURG, 1752. 

1178. SALZBURG, 1757. Sigismund. 

1179. SALZBURG, 1758. Angel holding 
picture of the Virgin and Child. 

1180. SALZBURG, 1759. 
arch-bishop. 

1181. SALZBURG, 1765. Sigismund. 

1182. SALZBURG, 1772. Hieronymus. 

1183. SALZBURG, 1793. Hieronymus. 

1184. SALZBURG, 1805. Ferdinand. 
Arch-duke of Austria. 

1185. SAN FRANCISCO DE IXTLAHUA- 
CA, 1809. Mexican city. Proclama- 
tion dollar. Ferdinand VII of Spain. 

1186. SAN LUIS POTOSI, 1828. Mexi- 
can city. 

1187. SAN MARINO, 1898. 
ian republic. 


1188. SAN MIGUEL EL GRANDE, 1808. 
Mexican city. Proclaiming its loyalty — 
to Spain during the French invasion of | 
that country. 


1189. SANTIAGO, 1789. City in Chile. 


On the coronation of Charles IV as — 


king of Spain and emperor of the In- 
dies. 

1190. SARDINIA, 1684. Charles II, igi 
of Spain was also king of this italian 
state. 


1191. SARDINIA, 1734. After separa- 
tion from the Spanish house. 
Emanuel III. 


1192. SARDINIA, 1755. 


1198. SARDINIA, 1793. 
deus III. 


1194. SARDINIA, 1799. 
uel IV. 


1195. SARDINIA, 1819. 
uel I 


1196. SARDINIA, 1826. 
1197. SARDINIA, 1849. Charles Albert. 


1198. SAVoyY, 1577. Italian state dol- 
lar of Emanuel aime its most cele- 
brated duke. 


Victor Ama- 


“| 22 


Arms } of 


Saint Rupert — 


Arms of the 


In memory of the patriots. | 
Small a 


Charles 


Charles Basune 
Victor Eman- | 


Charles Belin: be 


a 


1199. SAvoy, 1588. Under Charles 
4 i ay Emanuel. 

«1200. SAvoy, 1610. Charles Emanuel I. 
» | 1201. SAvoy, 1632. Victor Ama- 
ar. §«=.cdeus I, 

1202. SAvoy, 1680. Victor Amadeus II. 


This province was annexed to France 
in 1860. 
1203. SAXE-ALTENBURG, 1624. Ger- 
4 man principality, 
ane 1204. SAXE-ALTENBURG, 1626. 
1205. SAXE-ALTENBURG, 1841. Jos- 
oy) eph, 
«1206. SAXE-ALTENBURG, 1903. Ernst. 
On the fiftieth anniversary of his reign. 


+1207. SAXE-COBURG, 1817. German 
principality. Ernst. 
1208. SAXE-COBURG, 1827. 
1209. SAXE-COBURG, 1829. Arms of 
the duchy. 
- 1210. SAXE-CoBURG, 1854. Ernst II. 
1211. SAXE-CoBURG, 1895. Alfred. 


1212. SAXE-GOTHA, 1554-65.  Ger- 
man principality. John Frederick II. 
1213. SAXE- GOTHA, 1566. John Fred- 
oe erick II, 
1214, ee Sorex. 1618. 
1215. SAXE-GOTHA, 1624. 
1216. SAXE-GOTHA, 1671. 
_ orative dollar. 
1217. SAXE-GOTHA, 1675. On _ the 
death of duke Ernest. 
1218. SAXE-GOTHA, 1691. 
_ dukes of the principality. 
1219. SAXE-GOTHA, 1717. On the sec- 
ond centennial of the reformation. 
Frederick II. 


1220. SAXE-GOTHA, 1755. 
__ orative dollar. 


: pant. SAXE-GOTHA, 1764. 


Casimir. 
Commem- 


The seven 


Commem- 


Frederick 


[222, SAXE-HILDBURGHAUSEN, 1780. 
_ German principality. Joseph Frederick, 
regent. 

_ 1228. SAXE-MEININGEN, 1763. Ger- 
~~ man principality. Louise Eleanore. 

i 1224. SAXE-MEININGEN, 1846. Bern- 
yabard. 
225. SAXE-MEININGEN, 1902. George 

Al. 


226. SAXE-SAALFELD, 1694. German 
principality. John Ernest VIII. 
(1227 SAXE-SAALFELD, 1717. On the 
q te second centennial of the reformation. 
Martin Luther. 

a 1228. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1574. German 
_—s principality. Frederick and John. 


“DOLLARS OR 


THE WORLD. 


1229. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1584. Frederick 
William. 

1230. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1600. Frederick 
and John. . 

1231. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1619. _ Eight 
Brothers. 

1232. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1757. 

1233. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1763. Anna 
Amalia. 

12384. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1815. Fatherland 
dollar. During war with Napoleon. 


1235. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1842. Charles 
Frederick. 

1236. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1855. Carl 
Alexander. 

1237. SAXE-WEIMAR, 1903. William 


Ernst. On his marriage. 

1238. SAX-WEISSENFELS, 1663. Ger- 
man principality. On the founding of 
a church at Weissenfels. 

1239. SAXE-WEISSENFELS, 1699. On 
the death of the duke. Jacob wrestling 
with the angel. 

1240. SAXE-ZEITZ, 1667. 
principality. Moritz. 

1241. SAXONY, 1518. Frederick III. 
One of the most elaborate of the early 
dollars. 

1242. SAXONY, 1525. John and George. 
Inscription: Silver money of the duchy 
of Saxony. 

1248. SAXONY, 1540. Henry. 

1244. SAXONY, 1549. Maurice. 

1245. SAXONY, 1567. Victory dollar. 
Struck by Augustus I. 

1246. SAXONY, 1569. Augustus I. 

1247. SAXONY, 1591. Christian I. 

1248. SAXONY, 1596. Christian II. 
John and Augustus. 

1249, SAXONY, 1611. 
Death dollar. 

1250. SAXONY, 1612. John George I. 
Mpa ye Christ is the aim of my 
ife. 

1251. SAXONY, 1617. On the centennial 
of the Lutheran reformation. Freder- 
ick III, Luther’s protector. 

1252. SAXONY, 1619. John George I. 
As vicar of the Holy Roman Empire. 

1253. SAXONY, 1629. John George I. 

1254. SAXONY, 1630. Commemorative 
of the marriage of the princess. 

1255. SAXONY, 1630. On the centen- 
nial of the Augsburg confession. John, 
the Constant. 

1256. SAXONY, 1661. John George II. 

1257. SAXONY, 1669. On the baptismal 
of the prince. 


German 


Christian II. 


“{ 23 Ie 


‘““DOLLARS OF THE Wortnm 


1258. SAXONY, 1671. Arms of Saxony. 

1259. SAXONY, 1678. Dedication of 
new shooting houses erected at Dres- 
den. Figure of Hercules. 

1260. SAXONY, 1678. Same event. 

1261. SAXONY, 1678. The Order of the 
Garter bestowed on John George II by 
the king of England. 

1262. SAXONY, 1679. 

1263. SAXONY, 1680. On the death of 
the duke. 

1264. SAXONY, 1690. John George III. 

1265. SAXONY, 1691. John George III. 
Mortuary dollar of the duke. 

1266. SAXONY, 1691. Same event. 

1267. SAXONY, 1693. Under John 
George IV. Order of the Garter. 
Shooting contest dollar. 

1268. SAXONY, 1694. On the death of 
John George IV. 

1269. Sak 1697. Frederick Augus- 
tus 1. 

1270. SAXONY, 1701. Arms of Saxony 
and Poland. This duke was king of 
Poland. 

1271. SAXONY, 1709. Monogram of 
the duke as Poland’s king. 

1272. SAXONY, 1711. 

1278. SAXONY, 1717. On the death of 
the duchess Anna Sophia. 

1274. SAXONY, 1727. On the death of 
the duchess Christine Eberhardine. 

1275. SAXONY, 1733. Frederick Augus- 
tus I. Last year of his reign. 

1276. SAXONY, 1740. Vicariat dollar of 
Frederick Augustus II. 

1277. SAXONY, 1741. Vicariat dollar 
of the same duke. The vacant throne 
of the emperor. 

1278. SAXONY, 1742. Frederick Augus- 
tus II. 


1279. SAXONY, 1757. Frederick Augus- 
tus II. 


1280. SAXONY, 1763. 
tian. 


1281. SAXONY, 1765. Frederick Augus- 
tus III. 

1282. SAXONY, 1767. Xavier. Admin- 
istrator during the minority of the 
duke. 

1283. SAXONY, 1790. Frederick Augus- 
tus III. Vicariat dollar. 

1284. SAXONY, 1792. Frederick Augus- 
tus IIL. 

1285. SAXONY, 1806. In this year the 
duchy became the kingdom of Saxony, 
by reason of its alliance with Napoleon. 


Frederick Chris- 


1286. SAXONY, 1820. Frederick Augus- 
tus I, king of Saxony. | 

1287. SAXONY, 1825. Coined from sil- 
ver of the Saxon mines. 

1288. SAXONY, 1827. Frederick Augus- 
tus I. On the death of the king, after 
a rule of sixty-four years. 

1289. SAXONY, 1831. On the adoption 
of a new constitution. 

1290. SAXONY, 1832. Anthony. 

4291. SAXONY, 1854. Frederick Augus- 
tus II, 

1292. SAXONY, 1854. 
of the king. 

1293. SAXONY, 1858. John. | 

1294. SAXONY, 1872. John. On the 
fiftieth anniversary of his marriage. 

1295. SAXONY, 1875. Albert. 

1296. SAXONY, 1904. George. Death 
dollar. 
1297. SAXONY, 1909. Frederick Augus- 

tus III. Commemorating the founding 
of the Leipzic university in 1409. 
1298. SCHASSBURG, 1660. City in 


Mortuary dollar 


Transylvania. Struck by Achatius Barc- fe 


wi when besieged by George Rakoczi 


1299. SCHAUENBURG, 1614. Principal- 
ity in Holstein. Ernest. : 
1300. SCHAUFFHAUSEN, 1621. Swiss 
canton. : 
1301. SCHAUFFHAUSEN, 1865. Shoot- 

ing contest dollar. William Tell’s son 
holding the apple pierced by his father’s 
arrow. tke 
1302. SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN, 1808. 
Then a Danish province. he oh 
1308. SCHLICK, 1505-28. Bohemian 
principality. Titles of Louis II, last 
national king of Hungary and Bohe- 
mia. Killed at the battle of Mohacz. 


1304. SCHLICK, 1525. 
1305. SCHLICK, 1645. 
1306. SCHLICK, 1767. 


1307. SCHWARZBURG, 1605. German — 
principality. 


1308. SCHWARZBURG, 1687. Christian 
William. 


1309. SCHWARZBURG, 1711. Anton 
Gunther II. 


1310. SCHWARZBURG-RUDOLSTADT, 


1765. German principality. John 


Frederick. 


1311. SCHWARZBURG-RUDOLSTADT, 
1780. On the marriage of the prince. 


1812. SCHWARZBURG-RUDOLSTADT, 
1786. 


424: 


POOLULARS OBR: THE WORLD’ 


1818. SCHWARZBURG-RUDOLSTADT, 
1812. Frederick Gunther. Convention 
dollar. 

1314. SCHWARZBURG-RUDOLSTADT, 
1845. Frederick Gunther. 

1815. SCHWARZBURG-SONDERHAUSEN, 
1764. German principality. Christian 
Gunther. 

1316. SCHWARZBURG-SONDERHAUSEN, 
1854. Gunther Frederick Charles. 

1317. SCHWARZENBERG, 1696. German 
principality. Ferdinand and Maria Anna. 

1318. SCHWARZENBERG, 1696. Ferdi- 
nand. 

1319. SCHWARZENBERG, 1783. John. 

1820. SCHWYZ, 1867. Swiss canton. 
Shooting contest dollar. 

1321. SCOTLAND, 1565. Dollar of Mary 
Stuart. Inscription: Let God arise and 
scatter His enemies. 

1322. SCOTLAND, 1570. Struck by 
James VI. Inscription: For me, or 
against me, if I merit it. 

1323. SCOTLAND, 1675. 
England. 


Charles II of 


—- 4824. SCOTLAND, 1688. James VII (II 


Pattern dollar. 
William and 


of England). 
1325. SCOTLAND, 1692. 
Mary. 


1326. SCOTLAND, 1716. James VIII. 
Pattern dollar. This prince did not 
ascend the throne. In 1707 England 
and Scotland were united as Great 
Britain. 

1827. SERVIA, 1879. Milan IV. 

1328. SERVIA, 1904. Peter I. On the 
centennial of its independence. 

1329. SIAM, 1851-68. Asiatic state. 
Struck by king Maha Mongkut. 


1830. SIERRA-LEONE, 1791. _ British 
African colony. Dollar of the Sierra 
Leone Company. 

1331. SILESIA, 1541. 
ince. Frederick II. 

1882. SILESIA, 1648. Ferdinand III, of 
Austria, duke of Silesia. 

1338. SILESIA, 1657. George, Louis 
and Christian, the three dukes. 

1834. SILESIA, 1660. George. 

1335. SILESIA, 1666. Christian. 

1336. SINTZENDORF, 1676. German 
principality. George Louis. 

1337. SOLMS-LAUBACH, 1738-84. Ger- 
man principality. Christian August. 
1338. SOLMS-LAUBACH, 1748. On the 

death of the countess Elisa. 


1339. SOLMS-LAUBACH, 1754. On the 
death of the countess Dorothea. 


Bohemian prov- 


1340. SOLMS-LAUBACH, 1768. 

1341. SOLMS-LAUBACH, 1770. Memo- 
rial dollar in honor of count Otto, for- 
mer head of the House. , 

1842. SOLOTHURN, 1550. 
ton. 

1348. SOLOTHURN, 1813. 

1844. SOLOTHURN, 1855. Regular 
Swiss dollar with inscription on edge 
commemorating shooting contest. 

1345. SOMBRERETE, 1791. Mexican 
city. Proclamation dollar. The Som- 
brerete mountain gives its name to the 
Mexican hat known as the sombrero. 

1346. SOMBRERETE, 1812. War dollar. 
Struck by General Vargas. 

13847 SOUDAN, 1887. African state. 

1848. SPAIN, 1504-16. The first Span- 
ish dollar. Struck by Ferdinand V and 
Isabella I shortly after the discovery of 
America by Columbus. 

1349. SPAIN, 1588. Under Philip II. 
Arms of Spain. The defeat of Invin- 
cible Spanish Armada in this year 
marked the beginning of the decline of 
this power. 

1350. SPAIN, 1607. 

1351. SPAIN, 1635. Under Philip IV. 

1352. SPAIN, 1729. Under Philip V, 
grandson of Louis XIV, whose acces- 
sion to the throne caused the war of the 
Spanish succession. 

1353. SPAIN, 1776. Charles III. Ob- 
tained Louisiana from England. 


1354. SPAIN, 1803. CharlesIV. Ceded 
Louisiana to France and abdicated the 
throne in favor of Napoleon’s brother 
Joseph. 

1355. SPAIN, 1810. Ferdinand VII, son 
of Charles IV, whose efforts to retain 
the throne, assisted by Great Britain, 
caused the Peninsular war. 

1356. SPAIN, 1811. Joseph. Became 
king of Spain after relinquishing the 
throne of Naples. 

1357. SPAIN, 1813. Ferdinand VII. Se- 
cured the throne after the French were 
driven from Spain by Lord Wellington. 
The Spanish colonies in Mexico, Cen- 
tral and South America were lost dur- 
ing his reign. Ceded Florida to the 
United States. Re-established the in- 
quisition. 

1358. SPAIN, 1823. 

1859. SPAIN, 1833. 
Last year of his reign. 

1860. SPAIN, 1834. Isabella II. 

1361. SPAIN, 1855. Isabella II. 


1362. SPAIN, 1861. Isabella II. 


Swiss can- 


Under Philip III. 


Ferdinand VII. 


“{ 25 


“DOLLARS OF THE WORLD? oe 


1363. SPAIN, 1870. Under provisional 
republican government, 


1864. SPAIN, 1871. Amadeus I. 
1365. SPAIN, 1874. Don Carlos, pre- 
tender. Pattern. 
1866. SPAIN, 1875. 
1367. SPAIN, 1884. Alfonso XII. 


1368. SPAIN, 1885. Reverse of dollar 
struck by Don Carlos. Pattern. 
1369. SPAIN, 1888. Alfonso XIII. 


1370. SPAIN, 1893. Alfonso XIII. 
Ceded Porto Rico and the Philippines 
to the United States. 

1371. SPEYER, 1770. 
opric. 


Alfonso XII. 


German bish- 


1372. SPRINZENSTEIN, 1705. German 
principality. Francis Ignatius. 
1373. SPRINZENSTEIN, 1717. John 


Ehrenrich. 
1374. STABLO, 1570. 
pality. 
1875. STOLBERG, 
cipality. 
1376. STOLBERG, 1624. 
1377. STOLBERG, 1706. 
1378. STOLBERG, 1760. 


German. princi- 


1547. German prin- 


Christian 


Ernst. On the fiftieth anniversary of 
his reign. 

1379. STOLBERG, 1764. Arms of the 
principality. 


1380. STRASSBURG, 1590. German city 
before its annexation to France. Struck 
during a siege of the city. 

1381. STRASSBURG, 1592. During the 
war between the cardinal of Lorraine 
and the elector of Brandenburg. War 
dollar. 

1882. STRASSBURG, 1650. Inscription: 
Virtue only is the perpetual flower. 
1883. STRASSBURG, 1679. On the treaty 
of peace between France and Austria. 


1384. STYRIA, 1564-90. Austrian prov- 
ince. 


1385. 
1386. 
1387. 
1388. 
1389. 
1390. 


LOise 
1629. 
1636. 
1641. 
1682. 


STYRIA, 
STYRIA, 
STYRIA, 
STYRIA, 
STYRIA, 


Ferdinand. 
Ferdinand III. 
Ferdinand II. 
Ferdinand III. 
Leopold I. 
STYRIA, 1713. Charles VI. 
1391. STYRIA, 1740. Charles VI. 


1392. SUB-ALPINE, 1802. Italian state 
founded by Bonaparte. 


1893. SUMATRA, 1890. _ Asiatic island 
under Dutch protection. Dollar of the 
Soengy Diskie Estate, large plantation 
owners. 


1394. SWEDEN, 1542. GustavusI. This 
king drove the Danes from Sweden and 
ruled by personal authority and not by 
law. First dollar of this kingdom. 


1895. SWEDEN, 
1396. SWEDEN, 


1559. 
1561. 


Gustavus I, 
Eric XIV. Be- 


came insane, was deposed and assassi- 


nated. 
1397. SWEDEN, 
1398. SWEDEN, 
1399. SWEDEN, 
1400. SWEDEN, 
1401. SWEDEN, 


1562. 
1579. 


Joba it. 


1605. Charles IX, 


1610. 
Loads 


Charles IX. 
. Gustavus II 


(Adolphus). Most famous of Sweden’s 


kings. 


during the thirty years war. 


the battle of Lutzen. 


1402. SWEDEN, 


1615. 


Leader of the protestant forces 


Killed at 


Salvator dollar. 


This reverse appears on many of the 
early Swedish coins. 
viour of the world, save us. Struck by 
Gustavus Adolphus, 


1408. SWEDEN, 1640. Christina, 


daughter of Gustavus Adolphus. 


Inscription: Sa- 


Ab- 


dicted the throne and died in Rome. 


1404. SWEDEN, 
1405. SWEDEN, 


1406. SWEDEN, 
the king. 


1407. SWEDEN, 
1408. SWEDEN, 


1647. 
1654. 
1660. 


16TZ, 


1707. 


Christina. 
Charles X. 
On the death of 


Charles XI. 
Charles XII, 


whose victories in Denmark, Poland 
and Russia placed him high among the 


illustrious men of his time. 


He was 


killed at the battle of Frederickshall at 
the age of thirty-seven. 


1409. SWEDEN, 1713. Charles XII. _ 


1410. SWEDEN, 


1141. SWEDEN, 
Charles XII. 


1412. SWEDEN, 
1413. SWEDEN, 


land If. 


1414. SWEDEN, 
Ulrica. 


1415. SWEDEN, 
1416. SWEDEN, 


1718. 
1718. 


Charles XII. 
Monogram of 


1719. Ulrica Bleonore, 


1721. Commemorating 
the bi-centennial of the expulsion of the 
Danes from Sweden and the introduc- 
tion of the Lutheran religion. Gustavus — 


173.1; 


1750. 
1770. 


(Adolphus Frederick). 


1417. 
1418. 
1419. 
1420. 
1421. 


SWEDEN, 
SWEDEN, 
SWEDEN, 
SWEDEN, 
SWEDEN, 


“26 yw 


1782. 
1793. 
1796. 
1805. | 
1816. 


Frederick I and 


Frederick I. or 2 
Frederick II 


Gustavus III. 
Gustavus IV. 


Gustavus IV. 
Charles XIII. 


_ 1422, SWEDEN, 1821. On the third 
centennial of the expulsion of the 
Danes, etc. Gustavus I and II and Fred- 
coum erick I. 
_-: 1423. SWEDEN, 1821. Charles XIV. 
if John Bernadotte, French revolutionary 
general and marshall of the empire, 
adopted by Charles XIII as heir to the 
throne. 
1424. SWEDEN, 1836. Charles XIV. 
1425. SWEDEN, 1848. Oscar I. 
- 1426. SWEDEN, 1859. Arms of the 
i kingdom, Inscription; Right and 
ae, truth, 
_ 1427. SWEDEN, 1862. 
ae SWEDEN, 1907. 


Charles XV. 


Oscar II. On 
_____ the fiftieth anniversary of his marriage. 
©1429. SZECHUEN, 1912. Chinese prov- 
meer. ince. 
1430. TAI CHING, 1900. Chinese prov- 
- ince. 


1481. TARRAGONA, 1809. Spanish city. 
Necessity dollar during the French in- 

 vasion. 

1432. TAsco, 1914. Mexican city. War 

— dollar. Struck by General Zapata. 

14338. TASSAROLO, 1640. 

cipality. Philip Spinola. 


1434. TEEUTONIC ORDER, 1575. A 
_ military and religious order of knights 
founded in 1190 and suppressed by 
Napoleon in 1809. At one time it ruled 
>. Prussia, 


1435. TEUTONIC ORDER, 1603. 
1436. TEUTONIC ORDER, 1618. Maxi- 
milian. 

1437. TEUTONIC ORDER, 1623. Charles. 
1438. TEUTONIC ORDER, 1624. Charles 
_ 1489. TEUTONIC ORDER, 1673. John 
ee Caspar II. 

_ 1440. TEUTONIC ORDER, 1776. Charles 
Alexander. 

1441. THOREN, 1563. German order. 
1442. THORN, 1629. City in Poland. 


i Commemorating the defense and burn- 
_ ing of the city. 


1443. THORN, 1631. Under the Polish 
__ king Sigismund III. 
1444, THORN, 1638. Arms of the city. 
45. THORN, 1659. John Casimir, 
king of Poland. 
a 1446. TICINO, 1814. Swiss canton. 

_ 1447. TOURNAY, 1592. Belgian prov- 
ms ince, under the king of Spain, Philip II. 


(1448. TTRANQUEBAR, 1671. Danish In- 
dia. Dollar of the Danish Eastern 
Company, for trading in the orient. 


Italian prin- 


PWOLLARS OF THE WORLD’’ 


1449, TRANQUEBAR, 1749. Pattern 
dollar of the Danish Eastern Company. 

1450. TRANSVAAL, 1892. (South 
African Republic.) President Paul Kru- 
ger. 

1451. TRANSYLVANIA, 1593. Now 
Roumania. Sigismund Bathori. Capt. 
John Smith, Virginia colonist, had pre- 
viously served under this prince. 

1452, TRANSYLVANIA, 1605. 
by Stephan Bocskai. 

1453. TRANSYLVANIA, 1613-29. Ga- 
briel Bethlen. 


Struck 


1454. TRANSYLVANIA, 1628. Gabriel 
Bethlen. 

1455. TRANSYLVANIA, 1628. Arms of 
the prince, 

1456. TRANSYLVANIA, 1648. George 
Rakoczi I. 

1457. TRANSYLVANIA, 1659. George 
Rakoczi II. ; 

1458. TRANSYLVANIA, 1661. John 
Kemeny. 

1459. TRANSYLVANIA, 1667. Michael 
Apafi. 

1460. TRANSYLVANIA, 1681. Michael 
Apafi. 

1461. TRANSYLVANIA, 1715. Under 


Charles VI of Austria. 

1462. TRAUTSON, 1620. German prin- 
cipality. Paul Sixtus, 

1468. TRAUTSON, 1638. John Francis. 

1464. TRAUTSON, 1715. Francis Euse- 
bius. 

1465. TRAUTSON, 1719. JohnLeopold. 

1466. TREVES, 1715. German arch- 
bishopric. Sede Vacant. 

1467. TREVES, 1757. John Philip. 

1468. TREVES, 1765. Arms of the 
arch-bishop. 

1469. TREVES, 1771. Clemens Wenzel. 


This arch-bishop was crown prince of 
Poland and duke of Saxony. 

1470. TREVES, 1794. Clemens Wenzel. 
Contribution dollar. Struck during the 
French occupation. 

1471. TUNIS, 1817. North African 
state. Under Turkish sovereignty. 

1472. TURKEY, 1777. Under Abd-El- 
Hamid I. 

1473. TURKEY, 1839-61. 
Ul-Medjid. 

1474. TURKEY, 1876. 
Aziz. 

1475. TUSCANY, 1572. 
Cosmos I. . 

1476. TUSCANY, 1585. Francis I. 

1477. TUSCANY, 1589. Ferdinand I. 


Under Abd- 
Under Abd-UI- 


Italian state. 


“(27 


‘‘DOLLARS OF THE WORLD” 


1478. TUSCANY, 1615. Cosmos II. 
1479. TUSCANY, 1638. Ferdinand II. 
1480. TUSCANY, 1676. John baptizing 
Christ. Inscription: My beloved Son. 
1481. TUSCANY, 1680. Cosmos III. 

1482. TUSCANY, 1758. Francis III, 
duke of Lorraine and Francis I of Aus- 
tria, husband of Maria Theresa. Be- 
came Holy Roman Emperor as the re- 
sult of the triumphs of his wife. 

1483. TUSCANY, 1771. Peter Leopold. 

1484. TUSCANY, 1774. Dollar for trad- 
ing in the orient. 

1485. TUSCANY, 1803. Independent 
kingdom. Annexed to France 1807- 
ré14, 5 Lous I. 

1486. TUSCANY, 1814. Returned to 
Austrian dominion. Ferdinand III. 

1487. TUSCANY, 1826. Leopold II. 

1488. TUSCANY, 1839. Arms of the 
duchy. 

1489. TUSCANY, 1846. 
Last of the dukes. 

1490. TYROL, 1486. Sigismund. Aus- 
trian province. The first dollar size 
coin ever struck in silver. The pieces 
coined in 1484 were somewhat smaller. 

1491. TYROL, 1603. Rudolph II. 

1492. TYROL, 1654. Ferdinand Charles. 

1493. TYROL, 1665. Sigismund Fran- 
cis. 

1494. TYROL, 1679. Leopold I. 

1495. TYROL, 1707. Joseph I. 

1496. TYROL, 1710. 

1497. ULM, 1572. German city. 

1498. UNITED STATES, 1795. Silver 
dollars were first coined in this coun- 


try in 1794, during Washington’s ad- 
ministration. Coinage suspended in 


Leopold II. 


1804. 

1499. UNITED STATES, 1795. Reverse 
of first dollar. 

1500. UNITED STATES, 1800. During 


the administration of John Adams. 
After 1804 no silver dollars were struck 
until 1840. 

1501. UNITED STATES, 1836. Pattern 
dollar. Known as the flying eagle. 
Jackson’s presidency. 

1502. UNITED STATES, 1864. During 
the civil war. Type of dollar in circu- 
lation from 1840-1878. 

1503. UNITED STATES, 1872. Reverse 
of dollar of that period. The inscrip- 
tion: “In God we trust’, first appeared 
during the civil war. 

1504. UNITED STATES, 1873. 
trade dollar. 


Pattern 


1505. UNITED STATES, 1873. Pattern 
trade dollar. 

1506. UNITED STATES, 1873. Pattern 
trade dollar. 

1507. UNITED STATES, 1873. Pattern 
trade dollar. 

1508. UNITED STATES, 1873. Pattern — 
trade dollar. a fa, 

1509. UNITED STATES, 1873. Pattern 
trade dollar. 

1510. UNITED STATES, 1878. Pattern 
standard dollar. 

1511. UNITED STATES, 1879. Pattern 


known as goloid metric dollar, so called 
because it contained a small percentage 
of gold. | 

1512. UNITED STATES, 1880. - Trade 
dollar adopted for commerce with the 
oriental countries. 

1518. UNITED STATES, 1883. 
ard dollar from 1878-1904. 

1514, UNITED STATES, 1900. Com- 
memorating the erection of a statue in 
Paris to General Lafayette by the chil- 
dren of the United States. — ; 

1515. UNITED STATES, 1921. Type 
used since 1921. Known as the peace 
dollar. 

1516. URBINO, 1574-24. 

1517. URUGUAY, 1844. 
Struck by General Oribe. 


Stand-_ 


Italian state. 
War dollar. 


1518. URUGUAY, 1877. Arms of the 
republic. 
1519. URUGUAY, 1917. Commemora- 


tive dollar. } 
1520. UTRECHT, 1569. Province of the 


Netherlands, then under dominion of 


the House of Spain. 


1521. UTRECHT, 1785. 
pendent province. 


1522. VAUD, 1812. Swiss canton. — 


1523. VENEZUELA, 1 863. President — 
Palz. : 


1524. VENEZUELA, 1876. 


1525. VENEZUELA, 1883. Commemo- 
rating the centennial of the birth of 
Bolivar. 


1526. VENICE, 1578-85. Italian state. 
Dollar of the doge Nicolo Da Ponte. 


1527. VENICE, 1722-32. 
1528. VENICE, 1756. 


1529. VENICE, 1763-78. The doge 
kneeling before the lion of St. Mark. 

1530. VENICE, 1778-89. The doge 
before St. Mark. 


1581. VENICE, 1789-97. Dollar or 
Louis Manin, last doge of Venice. Ws 


As an inde- 


{28 > 


532. VENICE, 1797. During the inva- 
_ sion of Italy by General Bonaparte. 
1533. VENICE, 1848. During the re- 
—__ bellion against Austrian rule. 
- 1584. VERDEN, 1548. German City. 
(1585. VIENNA, 1781. Austrian arch- 
bishopric. Christopher. 
1536. WALDECK, 1824. 
 cipality. 
(1537. WALDECK, 1847. Arms of Wal- 
deck and Pyrmont. 
15838. WALDECK, 1903. Frederick. 
1539. WALLENSTEIN, 1632. Albert, 
duke of Mecklenburg, Freidland and 
Sagan, leader of the Imperial armies 
in the thirty years war and one of the 
ablest generals of modern times. Assas- 
sinated by his troops at the instigation 
of Ferdinand II because of his ambition 
to obtain the Bohemian throne. 
540. WARSAW, 1812. An independent 
_ duchy in Poland established by Napo- 
leon for his ally Frederick Augustus, 
king of Saxony. 
541. WEST FRISIA, 1673. 
_ of the Netherlands. 
542. WEST FRISIA, 
548. WEST FRISIA, 
544. WEST FRISIA, 1742. 


545. WESTPHALIA, 1809. German 
kingdom founded by Napoleon. 
1546. WESTPHALIA, 1 8 1 1. 

_ brother of the emperor. 

47. WESTPHALIA, 1811. 

48. WINDISCH-GRATZ, 1732. Aus- 
_ trian principality. Leopold Victor. 


1549. WISMAR, 1622. City in Mecklen- 
burg. St. Laurent and gridiron. St. 
Laurent was martyred on a gridiron. 
1550. WISMAR, 1674. 

1551. WORMS, 1617. German city. On 
_ the centennial of the reformation. 


552. WURTEMBERG, 1537. Ulrich. 


German prin- 


Province 


io77. 
1682. 


Jerome, 


53. WURTEMBERG, 1629. _ Louis 
Frederick, administrator. 
co WURTEMBERG, 1640. Eberhard 
II. 
55. WURTEMBERG, 1694. Arms of 
the duchy 
se 1556. WURTEMBERG, 1707. Eberhard 
ve LOUis. 
557. ‘WURTEMBERG, 1769. Charles 
Eugene. 
58. WURTEMBERG, 1795. Frederick 


Eugene. On the third centennial of the 
founding of the duchy. 


““DOLLARS OF 


THE WORED ’ 


ed WURTEMBERG, 1803. Frederick 


1560. WURTEMBERG, 1810. Kingdom 
established in 1806. Frederick I. 


1561. WURTEMBERG, 1812. Arms of 
the kingdom. 

1562. WURTEMBERG, 
1563. WURTEMBERG, 
memorative dollar. 
1564. WURTEMBERG, 1846. 

marriage of the crown prince. 
1565. WURTEMBERG,: 1869. 
ee ats WURTEMBERG, 1892. 


1818. William I. 
1833. Com- 


On _ the 


Charles I. 
William 


1567. WURTEMBERG-OELS, 1674. Ger- 
man principality. Sylvius Frederick. 
1568. WURTEMBERG-OELS, 1686. On 

the death of the duke’s mother. 


1569. WURTEMBERG - OELS, 1716. 
Charles Frederick. 
1570. WURTEMBERG - OELS, 1785. 


Charles Christian. 


1571. WURZBURG, 1652. German bish- 
opric. John Philip I. 

1572. WURZBURG, 1675-83. Peter 
Philip. 

1573. WURZBURG, 1693. ~John Gott- 
fried. 

1574. WURZBURG, 1693. 

1575. WURZBURG, 1725. Christopher 
Francis. 

1576. WURZBURG, 1765. Adam Fred- 
erick. 


1577. WURZBURG, 1779. Francis Louis. 


1578. WURZBURG, 1785. 


1579. WURZBURG, 1786. Convention | 
dollar. 

1580. WURZBURG, 1795. Sede Vacant. 

1581. WURZBURG, 1795. George 


Charles. Struck during French occu- 
pation to meet war contributions. 


1582. WURZBURG, 1795. Reverse of 
war contribution dollar. Inscription: 
For the country. 

1583. WURZBURG, 1632. German city. 
. Struck by Gustavus Adolphus when 
possessed of the city during the thirty 
years war. 

1584. ZACATECAS, 1810. Mexican state. 
War dollar. Struck by the Spaniards 
during an insurrection. 


1585. ZANZIBAR, 1881. 
Indian ocean. 


1586. ZARA, 1813. City in Dalmatia. 
War dollar. Struck by the French 
army when besieged by the Austrians. 


Island in the 


a A 


‘*DOLLARS OR THE Worth 


1587. ZEALAND, 1583. Province of 
the Netherlands. William I (the silent) , 
founder of .the Dutch republic. 

1588. ZELLERFELD, 1730. German 
city. On the second centennial of the 
Augsburg confession. 

1589. ZUG, 1622. Swiss canton. 


1590. ZUG, 1869. Shooting contest 
dollar. 


1591. ZURICH, 1512. Swiss canton. 
The three beheaded saints holding their 
heads in their hands. 


1592. ZURICH, 1559. 


1593. ZURICH, 1620. 


1594, ZURICH, 1761. Inscription: God 
keep us in peace. 


1595. ZURICH, 1761. 
city of Zurich. 


1596. ZURICH, 1776. 
1597. ZURICH, 1783. 
1598. ZURICH, 1813. 


1599. ZURICH, 1859. Shooting contest 
dollar. 

1600. ZWOLLE, 1612-19. City in the 
Netherlands. 


View of the 


“{ 30 


First National Bank &§ Trust 
(Sompany Service 


a”, 


THE BANKING DEPARTMENT of the First National Bank and 
Trust Company receives the deposit accounts of corporations, indi- 
| viduals, banks and firms: conducts a general commercial banking 
business and extends credit to corporations, partnerships and indi- 
_vidual enterprises; makes loans on approved collateral; buys and 
sells bankers’ and trade acceptances; collects notes, drafts, coupons 
and bonds; transfers funds for customers by wire and executes 


telegraphic orders to make payments in Marquette. 


THE FOREIGN DEPARTMENT issues travelers’ letters of credit and 
_ travelers’ checks; purchases and sells foreign exchange: sells drafts 


and cable orders, payable in foreign currencies. 


THE TRUST DEPARTMENT acts as executor, administrator, trustee 
or guardian: as custodian of securities; collecting income and 


z matured principal and holding the securities available for sale, 


transfer or delivery; as trustee under corporate mortgages; as cus- 
todian under escrow agreements; as disbursing agent for dividends, 


transfer agent or registrar of stocks. 


_ THE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS of the First National Bank and 
“Trust Company are men of proved ability and integrity, and their 
experience makes possible a complete financial service of exception- 


able dependability and helpfulness. 


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Gs is the earliest dotiae: ever rads ie for 


the Province of Tyrol, by Sigismund, Arch- 
Duke of Austria in 1486. 


It is now in the First ideas Bank and Trust 
Company. — 


If it had been placed on deposit the year it was 
made and its interest compounded monthly at beats. + 
the rate the First National Bank and Trust Company — 
pays on thrift accounts—it | ‘would now amount to- 
more than a half million dollars. | 

apt i 

Vou cannot use compounded interest for 442 years 


: but it can work for you through all your life. A 


dollar’ starts a First’ National Bank and Taye Com- | 
pany Thrift Account. 


